Aaron Noble works at the intersection of pulp, street, and fine art. 

He still has most of his childhood comic book collection: the lodestone of his compositional sensibility. In the late ‘70s he graduated from Santa Cruz High School and moved to San Francisco. He became deeply involved in the punk and post-punk scene and briefly attended the San Francisco Art Institute, where he studied with the conceptual artist Howard Fried and the experimental writer Kathy Acker. During the ‘80s he wrote, raised wine grapes, and did performance art work culminating in a tour of post-Soviet Berlin and Czechoslovakia in 1990.

A year later, in 1991, with five other artist-activists, he co-founded the Clarion Alley Mural Project in San Francisco’s Mission District, and was for a time associated with the Mission School artists, even as his own work as a street painter was evolving away from their folky, handmade style. The superhero abstract painting style that he is known for, developed on the streets of San Francisco, and rooted in the San Francisco collage, mural, and graffiti traditions, received its first proper art world recognition with a project of five large murals in the lobby of the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, shortly after Noble’s relocation to that city in 2000. Since then he has painted murals around the world, participated in numerous gallery exhibitions, worked with several of the best printmakers in the country, and co-founded, with his wife, a successful lingerie retail business called Jenette Bras.


aaron@aaronnoble.net
IG: @aaronnoble

Aaron Noble