
Blek le Rat: I very much like your new way of working. You  overlay different coats of paint in which you blend images that almost  vanish under new coats of paint. It is like superposing different skins,  I knew someone who called this" the skins of the walls". Can you tell  me more about this way of working?
HUSH: I like that  phrase. I play with lots of ideas in the paintings I make and like to  reference a lot of movements, past and present. I have always loved that  old graff rule about a throw can go over a tag, a dub over a throw, a  piece over a dub and so on.
I also love the transient way in  which work on the street evolves and usually looks more at home the  longer it settles, gets going over, degrades and fades. I try to create  all these actions and mistakes in the studio.
I always work on  two of the same paintings every time I create a piece, partly for the  fact that I will take more risks on one so my work progresses, although  there does come a point where I will only finish one as it becomes  obvious which one is working.
I also do this so when I make a new  painting I can go over the discarded painting and leave remains of it  visible to the viewer. I kind of take pleasure in knowing that there was  a good piece and lots of work underneath a painting. It always feels  uncomfortable working on a clean canvas, I like the feel and textures of  a worked on