Sheryo and The Yok talk about art, Miami and their “Endless Summer Travels“…
Sheryo and The Yok
How long have you been painting?
S: I started when I was 19 and the stopped in between where I wasn’t painting that many walls. After I met The Yok I painted a whole lot more.
Where are you from?
S: I am from Singapore originally but now we both live in New York.
Y: I am from Australia.
Did you come to Miami just for Art Basel Miami Beach?
S: Yes. We will be painting mostly. We are not fast about going to any fairs. We have a few pieces in a few gallery shows here in Miami right now. Brisky Gallery and Max Fish pop up and I am part of the exhibition “Women on the Walls” at Wynwood Walls with an entire line up of ladies who paint murals.
What themes do you explore in your murals?
S: We have been traveling a lot even though we are based in New York. We are kind of nomadic and keep traveling to different places so we take a lot of inspiration from things that happen during our vacations and travels. We are always looking for summer weather so we call it “The Endless Summer Travels.” Our murals are usually also inspired by a lot of creatures and characters on vacation. The second mural we painted in Wynwood is a creature wearing a holiday vacation shorts, on the beach, sun tanning, soaking up the Miami vibes. We try to keep it a bit site-specific.
Where are you off to next to soak up some more sun yourselves?
Probably Southeast Asia. Indonesia, Vietnam.
Do you usually get a lot of commissioned work at the places you visit or do you just go and find some walls?
It is a mix of everything. We have been pretty lucky so far. People see us painting a wall and then they like it and they approach us for another wall. Or through the internet.
You use a lot of gold in your work. What is the significance of that color choice?
S: We started using less colors because we were always traveling. A paint situation. It is just way easier to get the paint if you only use a few colors. We started to develop a style with just four colors. Our own little color palette.
Y: It is a trademark style. It is a lot bolder, the less colors you use and it heightens your line work because you have to be more focused on the lines. We use thick and thin line works to differentiate parts rather than color. I think the gold came from us working in Cambodia. They use a lot of gold leaf in their paintings and that really influenced us and stuck with us. On other travels, it is something that we have kept as a constant. It is a nice way to draw attention to a part of the mural.
Do you do murals and gallery work? Do you have any other upcoming exhibitions?
Yes, both. We have an upcoming show next year November in New York and in April in Australia.
You are from Australia. When did you leave?
Y: Maybe 10 years ago. I have been in New York for three years and before that I was in Bangkok and Kenya and Singapore.
Did you travel to all those countries to paint?
Y: I have a background in graphic design but my passion has always been painting. Every city we go to, we try and paint something.
You are both using an alias to paint. How did you come by your names?
S: He is The Yok and I am Sheryo.
Y: I just like the letters for mine. It has nice letters and it doesn’t have a meaning. My artwork gives it a meaning.
S. For me, it’s a combination of my real name and my obsession with Oreo cookies.
Was this your first trip to Miami during Art Basel?
Y: Yes, the first time. First time in Miami ever.
S: I wanna see some flamingoes.
What was the concept for the first mural you did in Wynwood?
S: The same thing really. Characters on a holiday, chasing the endless summer vibes. It’s got a bit of Miami flavor in it.
Tell us a bit about the gallery pieces you do
S: We are doing some stuff on batik. We have been doing our artwork on fabric done in the traditional batik way. It is totally new and on show at the “Women on the Walls” exhibit. It is a lot of work. If you do 10, maybe 5 or 6 come out nice.
Y: It is done with hot wax. You dye the fabric and then boil the wax off.
S: Last year we had a show in New York based on ceramics. We also did a crazy dragon sculpture on a skateboard that looks like it is made out of ceramics. We want to do more because it was so well received. We actually went to a village in Vietnam to do the ceramics. Same with the batik. We went there and did it. We spoke zero Vietnamese but we had so much fun with the locals. We did Karaoke.
What is your favorite Karaoke song?
S: Britney Spears
What do you listen to right now?
S: A lot of hip hop, rap and reggae lately.