

RETNA American, b. 1979
(152.4 x 121.9 cm)
American street and graffiti artist RETNA is famous for his iconic typographic compositions, across a range of media from photography, painting, sculpture, and graffiti; all of which explore an underlying unity between different cultures. His artworks fuse visual references to fashion, various types of linguistics and calligraphy including Blackletter, Egyptian Hieroglyphics, Arabic, and Hebrew, as well as symbols from urban culture.
Marquis Lewis was born in 1979 in Los Angeles with a blended cultural heritage, being of African-American, El Salvadorian, Spaniard, Pipil and Cherokee descent. Choosing the moniker RETNA from the lyrics to a Wu-Tang Clan song, Lewis joined the buzzing graffiti scene of the city as a teenager, developing his now signature calligraphic style that features a keen attention to detail and skillful layering. The incorporation of text into his later artworks is a direct result of his background in graffiti art. The artist uses a paintbrush in addition to a spray can in order to paint intricate lines and give the finished work an intuitive and dynamic, yet precisely composed effect.
Since emerging on the scene, he has been renowned for many publicly and privately commissioned murals in New York, Miami, Mexico City and Los Angeles, as well as for numerous collaborations with famous brands such as Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Nike and Vista Jet.
With a practice rooted in varied typographic forms, RETNA works from a hybrid alphabet consisting of Egyptian hieroglyphs, Arabic calligraphy to Blackletter, making the content of his artworks indecipherable and enigmatic. He creates unique pictographic landscapes that celebrates the idea of multiculturalism and interconnection, while exploring the possibilities of conceptual meaning within the image, revealing new ways of understanding and perceiving visual codes.