It’s the work of London-based street artist EINE,  who painted the 26 letters of the alphabet around these San Francisco  neighborhoods and painted one large work, "We Rock Hardest," above the  KFC restaurant on Polk and Eddy Streets.
EINE, a.k.a. Ben Flynn, uses both canvas and city walls to play with  large-scale typography and the English language. His early claim to fame  was to make “Vandalism” look pretty, literally. He wrote the word on a  wall in London.
EINE came into the spotlight when he started collaborating with the world-renown, elusive street artist, Banksy,  in 2000. They exhibited together over several years in Berlin, Vienna,  Denmark and Australia and collaborated on the famous Palestinian Wall  project. In 2008, EINE began exhibiting solo, showing in Los Angeles,  New York, Tokyo, and throughout Europe.
In San Francisco, EINE says he got permission for 90 percent of the  public work he did. But even for the art that wasn’t “commissioned,” he  wasn’t weary of police or pedestrian interference. 
EINE’s pieces on the streets of San Francisco are an extension of his show “Greatest,” which is up at White Walls  gallery right now. When you walk into the Tenderloin gallery, the first  thing you see is a huge wall piece, larger than any other work, which  is a multi-hued clutter of words and phrases.
For art aficionados who don’t want to roam the streets of the Tenderloin  looking for EINE’s alphabet, the show at White Walls is a good  introduction to his work. 
But I’d suggest looking for EINE’s  pieces on the streets. Somehow EINE’s colorful typography feels loud in  the gallery since it’s meant to stand out on city streets, which are  often dull and grey. And while EINE’s word fall flat and come-off as a  little too controlled in the gallery, on the streets they play off the  landscape where the words take on a different meaning. 
Taken from: Bay Citizen
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