JonOne: graffiti's thinking man

The artist talks inspiration and his new collaboration with Hennessy

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JonOne enters the rooftop restaurant of Shoreditch's Curtain Hotel covered in paint splattered clothes. Two of his fingers are tipped in pastel blue acrylic, while splodges of colour appear to have been fired at him machine-gun style, coating his tee-shirt, army trousers and Stan Smiths in a rainbow of emulsified shots. It is not a contrived artist's get-up - the graffiti pro has been painting a giant 6-metre high Hennessy bottle on the green of nearby Boxpark – a public art project that celebrates his new limited edition bottle for the cognac brand, styled in his mad abstract/typographic style. JonOne, 54, also known as Jon156, is no stranger to high profile collaborations. He's custom painted a jet liner for Air France, created a limited series of Perrier bottles, Lacoste polo shirts and a special run of LG portable speakers. He's even customised former football hero Eric Cantona's convertible Rolls Royce Corniche, which now sits in pride of place in the lobby of Paris' arty Molitor Hotel. In 2015, the French government commissioned him to reinterpret Delacroix's famous Liberty Leading the People painting – a symbol of freedom and equality commemorating the July Revolution of 1830. His large scale abstract work, which depicts a stencilled Marianne in a freny of colourful blotches and blue tags, hangs at the French National Assembly in Paris.

Suffice to say that the boy from the ghetto did good. But JonOne isn't about to forget his roots – he grew up on the streets and spent most of his twenties living hand to mouth; always happy but as he puts it "bum broke". His story begins in Harlem where he was born and raised. "I was never a victim of my environment but yeah, I could have easily ended up in jail or into drugs or homeless. The streets are hard and I was lucky to make it out," says the artist who in breakfasting on a plate of pineapple. He's nabbed a banana too for later. "I'm always hungry", he laughs. "Hungry for everything. I've always been that way. Hustling and making 50 cents into a dollar."

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