
Please tell us a little bit about yourself. Age 40 and currently living in Los Angeles, California.
What made you want to decorate public utility boxes? I responded to a call for public art to the city of Culver City. They wanted to decorate boxes and I had this idea.
Where do you go to get the pictures printed to be glued on? Do the people working there think you’re crazy for blowing up random street pictures? I use a printer that usually does car wraps and billboards. I think they must think that it is a mistake.
(Source: titlemagazine.net)

Characterized by his use of colors, Hideyuki Katsumata’s artwork is melodramatic as well as hectic in the way that his forms and different characters are placed in-between, around and in front of each other. Seemingly unorganized, Hideyuki’s pieces have a sense of a dynamism that is all juxtaposed with familiar color palettes. We were able to ask this Japanese artist a few questions in hopes of untangling his artwork.
(Source: titlemagazine.net)

A little about your background, please. I grew up in a small California town called Clovis. I was a sophomore in High School when I started taking photos and spent the next two years in the dark room. Then I went away to film school. Then I came back to photography and have been shooting steadily for the past 6 years. But aside from my high school photography classes, I haven’t had any formal education.
What inspired you to study film? It was just one of those things that ‘clicked’ for me as a teenager. It instantly grabbed me and gave me something to hang on to during those dark, dark teenage years.
(Source: titlemagazine.net)