Remi’s graffiti brings order and beauty to chaos. That’s why his work is on brick, textured panel or paper. He’s bringing elegance to the grunge, with sacred geometry and colour theory, which feels both real, and positive, at the same time. For me it creates a deeper sense that, no matter what, everything’s going to be ok.
He began tagging graffiti across South London in the 1980s, painting walls and trains. Over the years he refined his visual voice into the fully abstract, geometrically driven studio and mural practice we see today.
Born in 1971 in South London, his studio work is collected widely, and he’s been commissioned to create many large, public murals in urban sites. He’s been profiled by The Guardian, FAD Magazine, and Forbes magazine named him as ‘one of the five graffiti artists shaping the future of contemporary art’.
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