News

She’ll make you look twice: LA street artist spreads whimsy, hope

In downtown Los Angeles, absurdity interrupts urban blight: A fire hydrant sprouts stockinged legs; a winged telephone leaps from a phone booth; a mailbox towers, inaccessible, over passersby. 

The city’s historic business district and surrounding neighborhoods are the backdrop for contemporary street artist S.C. Mero, who sees opportunity in a landscape dogged by disappointment and deferred dreams. The Minnesota native embraced the area, known as DTLA, after graduating from the University of Southern California a decade ago. Today, her rogue installations are part of downtown’s creative fabric – and local authorities are in on it. She’s been honored by the city for her contributions to the Skid Row neighborhood and commissioned by the nearby Fashion District to decorate a median at an intersection.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

What makes a person install whimsical, unexpected art in the middle of urban blight? As LA street artist S.C. Mero sees it, there’s no better way to transform spaces – and thinking.

Transformation governs her art. Ms. Mero’s first pieces were mosaics made of pennies, which she altered with heat, dye, and tools. Other projects reshape abandoned spaces into commentaries on politics and humanity. 

Her work insists on hope, which she describes as rebellious. “To put something like cute little turtles on a median with downtown the way it is, it’s resisting something, right? It’s resisting the default, which is to be negative,” she says.

In downtown Los Angeles, absurdity interrupts urban blight: A fire hydrant sprouts stockinged legs; a winged telephone leaps from a phone booth; a mailbox towers, inaccessible, over passersby. 

The city’s historic business district and surrounding neighborhoods are the backdrop for contemporary street artist S.C. Mero, who sees opportunity in a landscape dogged by disappointment and deferred dreams. The Minnesota native embraced the area, known as DTLA, after graduating from the University of Southern California (USC) a decade ago. Today, her rogue installations are part of downtown’s creative fabric – and local authorities are in on it. She’s been honored by the city for her contributions to the Skid Row neighborhood and commissioned by the nearby Fashion District to decorate a median at an intersection.

Transformation governs her art. Ms. Mero’s first pieces were mosaics made of pennies which she altered with heat, dye, and tools. Other projects reshape abandoned spaces into commentaries on politics and humanity. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

What makes a person install whimsical, unexpected art in the middle of urban blight? As LA street artist S.C. Mero sees it, there’s no better way to transform spaces – and thinking.

Her work insists on hope, which she describes as rebellious. “To put something like cute little turtles on a median with downtown the way it is, it’s resisting something, right? It’s resisting the default, which is to be negative,” says Ms. Mero.

The Monitor spoke with Ms. Mero at Something Poetic, her venue for performance art. The space, offered to her during the pandemic by the Historic Core Business Improvement District, has become a hub for local artists. The conversation has been edited for clarity and length. 

Courtesy of S.C. Mero

The piece Vote-by-Mail was created leading up to the 2020 U.S. presidential election by artist S.C. Mero as a commentary on voting access. The towering mailbox is made of wood, insulation felt, spackle, acrylic, cardboard, and other materials. It stood temporarily 4th and Main Streets in downtown Los Angeles.

Why downtown? You joined an artist collective on Skid Row after graduating from USC. I’m guessing there were other options. 

I think my mom asked me the same question all the time. I just feel like it’s a good fit for what I’m doing. It’s really a creative vortex. … You have the Arts District, the Flower District, the Fashion District, Little Tokyo, you have the Industrial District, the Financial District. And maybe that’s typical of most cities, but I feel like there’s a lot happening here and it’s good for cultivating ideas. 

Previous ArticleNext Article