Eltono Explained

Eltono
Birth Place:Paris
Nationality:French
Known For:Public art, Abstract graffiti, Street art, Urban art, Graffiti

Eltono is a French artist born in the suburbs of Paris in 1975.[1] His work is mostly influenced by his graffiti background.[2] He started painting around 1989[3] in his neighborhood[4] [5] mostly on train tracks and highway walls. "Eltono focused mainly on the railway lines to the northwest of the city, painting in the traditional silver and black, block letter Parisian style."[6] He lived in Madrid from 1999 to 2010 (where he got his pseudonym[7]), then in Beijing[8] from 2010 to 2014 and since 2014 lives in the south of France.[9] In 1999, while living in Madrid, he started painting abstract symbols with tape and acrylic paint.[10] "It was then that he developed the colorful geometric box patterns for which he is now known."[11] "As Eltono himself suggested, his move away from traditional graffiti was produced so as to find a harmony with both the material and the social body of the city (integrating both its architectonic and societal elements in a more consensual manner)."[12] "Eltono also rejects conventional letterforms in favor of a minimalism device with which to negotiate space."[13]

Eltono's work is mainly influenced by the urban environment and questions the limits between public and private space.[14] He uses the term "public space artist" to describe his practice.[15] When showing his work in galleries and museums, he focuses on finding a coherent way to show street art in private spaces.[16] "[Eltono's] career in both the street and the galleries [], is an example of a certain ethic of sustained work, oblivious to everything, which creates its own parameters and builds its own audience."[17]

He has collaborated with artists such as MOMO (artist), Nuria Mora (http://nuriamora.com/), Luce and is part of Equipo Plástico art collective (alongside Nuria Mora, Nano4814 and Sixeart) and Noviciado9 (alongside 3ttman, Remed, Spok, Nano4814 and Luciano Suarez).

Solo exhibitions (selection)

Collective shows (selection)

Bibliography

External links

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Schacter. Rafael. The World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti. 2013. Yale University Press. 978-0300199420. 280.
  2. Book: Eltono. Line and Surface. 2012. Stickit. 9789081841801. 8.
  3. Book: Hundertmark. Christian. The Art of Rebellion 2 World of Urban Art Activism. 2006. Publikat. 9783980990943. 78.
  4. Le Guide de l'Art Comtemporain Urbain. Graffiti Art Magazine. 2013. Hors-serie. 88.
  5. Book: Schacter. Rafael. The World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti. 2013. Yale University Press. 978-0300199420. 280.
  6. Book: Schacter. Rafael. The World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti. 2013. Yale University Press. 978-0300199420. 280.
  7. Book: Schacter. Rafael. The World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti. 2013. Yale University Press. 978-0300199420. 280.
  8. Book: Geometry Makes me Happy. 2013. Index Book. 9788415308393. 160.
  9. Web site: Information. Eltono.com. 30 January 2016.
  10. Web site: Briggs. Richard. Eltono – navigator-commentator. Remap. 18 December 2012 . 30 January 2016.
  11. Web site: Miranda. Carolina A.. Beyond Graffiti. Artnews. January 2011 . 30 January 2016.
  12. Book: Schacter. Rafael. Ornament & Order: Graffiti, Street Art and the parergon. 2014. Ashgate. 9781472409980. 85.
  13. Book: Brook. Richard. Dunn. Nick. Urban Maps, Instruments of Narrative and Interpretation in the City. 2011. Ashgate. 9780754676577. 165.
  14. Web site: Incontrôlables. Eltono. Instituto Cervantes Paris. 30 January 2016.
  15. Book: Brook. Richard. Dunn. Nick. Urban Maps, Instruments of Narrative and Interpretation in the City. 2011. Ashgate. 9780754676577. 162.
  16. Book: Geometry Makes me Happy. 2013. Index Book. 9788415308393. 160.
  17. Book: Abarca. Javier. Line and Surface. 2012. Stickit. 9789081841801. 7.