October 2009

Logan Hicks and C215 in “Parallel Universe” at Show & Tell (Toronto)

Two Stencil Street Artists known well to Brooklyn are in a Parallel Universe November 6th in Toronto.

Two of the best on the scene today

Two of the best on the scene today

Show & Tell Gallery is proud to welcome world-renowned international stencil artists C215 (Paris) & Logan Hicks (NYC) to their first exhibition in Canada.

The show titled “Parallel Universe” is a unique look at stencil art, a subculture of graffiti that can be traced back over 30 years. Through their medium of choice both artists aim to capture the essence of city life. Logan creates highly detailed renditions of cityscapes, focusing on architecture, alleyways, and scenes that might not be easily recognized as beautiful. C215 on the other hand aims to capture human emotions and feelings through the subjects he chooses to paint, with his focus mainly on homeless, anonymous, and people who are generally rejected by society. The juxtaposition of both artists style is really something special, while they are close friends and work in a common medium their artistic styles vary significantly. “Parallel Universe” marks the first joint show between the pair and will feature several collaborative works as well as pieces that are inspired by one another.

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Gaia: A New Original at Mid-Semester: Part II

Gaia: A New Original at Mid-Semester: Part II

This is the second half of a two part article and interview with street artist Gaia.
Click here for Part I

Plastic is keeping the clay damp on this new sculpture Gaia is working on (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Plastic is keeping the clay damp on this new sculpture Gaia is working on (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Somehow the real commitment to the topic of animals as metaphor seems more tangible when you can touch and see the sculptures, hits and misses, and it also made me look back at the rest of the Gaia body of work collected in these short years.

The host is excited as we make our way out the back of the sculpture building into the sunny gold autumn, and we meet and greet friends and classmates all along the walk from the sculpture building to a small efficiency apartment live/work space that Gaia hangs out in.

A bicycle rim can be recycled as a halo, for those of you who were wondering what to do with them. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

A bicycle rim can be recycled as a halo, for those of you who were wondering what to do with them. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

A bicycle rim can be recycled as a halo, for those of you who were wondering what to do with them. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

A 2oo square feet kitchen/dining/office/bedroom all in one, it’s an unmitigated mess with high ceilings. One must kick a path through the scattered debris – an unmade futon, random strips of linoleum on the once white carpeted floor, a wooden kitchen table that doubles as a desk for homework, a tilting bookshelf, and a large 3’ x 5’ painted canvas by street artist friend Armsrock slung loosely on the wall, affixed with thumbtacks like a varsity flag for the anti-imperialist team. Okay, it’s a college student room, and it’s welcoming. Didn’t see any bongs – I know that’s what you were going to ask.

An oldie but a goodie by Gaia (photo Steven P. Harrington)

An oldie but a goodie by Gaia (photo Steven P. Harrington)

There was only time for a short interview because the easy conversation travels far from street art – family, parents, college life, divorce, growing up in New York, drugs, religion, how to roast an organic chicken, gender studies, Wall Street, cornrows in high school, art parties, Dan Deacon, and why the hell there are so many rows of houses abandoned and bricked up in the neighborhood near by.

Gaia is unceasingly introspective and verbally expressive in a way that tells you many theories and philosophies are simultaneously being examined and put into play at all times.  It’s an experimental season and eventually one or two of these philosophical approaches will be settled upon, but there’s no imperative just yet. The dialogue never lags, and the amiable host will gladly broach almost any topic with you, even if you both lose track of the conversations original route.

(photo Steven P. Harrington)

(photo Steven P. Harrington)

Eventually the topic does return back to street art and some new works in progress. Gaia shows some strangely conjoined animal heads made in Photoshop recently that will hopefully be a new direction of darker themes that the lino-prints will be taking.

Then Gaia jumps on the floor and starts to sketch a long-billed bird directly from an image just found on the laptop onto two slabs of linoleum and the drawing talents manifests. Smooth sure lines and deft shading quickly bring the form forward. Within a short time, the image begins to clarify, and the animal lifts from the surface, alive.

(photo Steven P. Harrington)

(photo Steven P. Harrington)

There was time for a short interview before it was back to class:

Brooklyn Street Art: So what’s the best part about making street art?
Gaia:
So this is obviously a question that I’ve tried to investigate throughout my entire process, beginning at an extremely basic place when I first started, and I have to constantly revisit it.

What’s the best part of making street work? I always have to investigate my motive and if there is a process from conceptualizing to composing to drawing to putting it up to viewing the reception, .. If, in any of those steps I’m not really deriving a sense of fulfillment, that can be problematic.

I have to always come back to these different steps and say “what’s going on here?” Honestly sometimes I consider my process kind of arduous. Sometimes it’s a real struggle for me. It’s cathartic but it’s not perfect or pure, it’s not what I enjoy. It’s a constant fight with the medium, with myself, with my concept, my intuition.

But once it is on the street I feel really good about it. And when people are coming up to me and saying that they’ve seen it, and drawing these different corollaries between these different spots that they’ve seen, creating a new sort of sense of the city – that’s the best.

 

Gaia in the hall outside of class (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Gaia in the hall outside of class (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: Do you put up your work for your friends?
Gaia:
Absolutely. I love to do that. That’s one of the most enjoyable things about going to school. I don’t want to publish myself as someone who is Gaia, but all of my close friends know that. It’s intrinsic to my life. I can’t possibly make this work and not share it, but at the same time I don’t want to totally “ego trip” it.

Admittedly, people know who I am, and people come up to me all of the time with suspicions, “Are you Gaia”? I don’t deny it. Maybe on the street I would, or at a gallery. At school I’m amongst my peers and I think it is important to share these things.

So that is a dilemma of being anonymous. There is a paradox between wanting to share so much, wanting to be generous with my work on the street and generous with my process while simultaneously trying to shed this ego, disrobe the identity, build a new one.

So yeah, I definitely make work for my friends, because it is super dope at the end of the day to have the people come up to me and say, “I saw your stuff on the street.”

 

"Deny Me Three Times", by Gaia (photo Steven P. Harrington)

“Deny Me Three Times”, by Gaia (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: When you are working on the animals and you are relating to them. Do you relate to them on an intellectual level, spiritual level, a heart level?
Gaia:
I’m really trying to do it from a spiritual level. I really am trying to think of a way of evolving a body of mythologies that are really autonomous of me, so they become these beings that destabilize the idea of institutionalized religion.

I want to develop my own body of these spirits that I’m the genesis of but I don’t have full agency of. They are things that filter through me and this is what I produce. I’m interested in the function of them being beyond me. So, I’m trying to get to that place on a spiritual level.

But on an intellectual level they are generally allegorical, whether it’s an actual narrative, whether it’s like a parable from the Bible – like this rooster is called “Deny Me Three Times”(above), because it’s about Jesus being denied by St. Peter on the day of his death, and three times of the crow of the rooster.

Referring back to these age-old stories that become invisible in our lives and become part of the canon… but at the same time I try to utilize these figures to express something emotionally. I use them mechanically, I use them conceptually. I’m also interested in them when considering the topic of domination and man’s relationship with animals. I try to use them from the Western understanding of the animal; the cow, the dove, the chicken; domestic Northern American themes.

 

Nice to meet you too. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Nice to meet you too. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

>>>>>

And with that, Gaia’s phone bleeped with a newly arrived text. A classmate was waiting in the sculpture building, and we had to split. No time to try the lentil soup Gaia had made.

Today a casual street art observer will make connections between the work of Gaia and other street artists whose art preceded it, and it’s natural to make comparisons. Who knows if Gaia can develop the body of mythologies that the artist is currently aiming for? But with the tenacity, curiosity, and energy that Gaia displays when creating new subjects and exploring new mediums, there is very good reason to believe that Gaia’s work will continue to distinguish itself from the crowd and become a standard that others are compared to.

And when the newcomers arrive, there will be plenty of room for them also.

>>>>>

This is the second half of a two part article and interview with street artist Gaia.
Click here for Part I

Read Gaia’s Blog at Juxtapoz

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Gaia: A New Original at Mid-Semester: Part I

Gaia: A New Original at Mid-Semester: Part I

"Cash Cow" (Gaia) (photo Jaime Rojo)

“Cash Cow” (Gaia) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Gaia’s work looks like Swoon’s, Dennis McNett’s, a little bit like Elbowtoe’s, and now Yote.

Looking through Gaia’s sketchbook you might also find that the work has aspects of Albrect Durer , Raimondi, Lucas Van Leyden, Hendrik Goltzius, zoological prints, the Farmer’s Almanac, and some of the flat files at Kentler International Drawing Space in Red Hook. I bring this up because sometimes devoted fans of one street artist fall into spasmodic revulsion when they discover a similarity in style in a newly arrived one.

It reminds me of the David Bowie fans who were furious when hordes of musical New Romantics, abetted by the arrival of MTV came on the scene in the early 1980’s, seemingly stealing the alien-androgyny aesthetic and asymmetry of sounds that Bowie had trailblazed in the 1970’s. Oh the outrage of the devoted, defending their Glam-God from the arrivistes!

As if David Bowie needed anyone to defend him. Check your iPod for the long list of Spandau Ballet songs you’ve been listening to? How about ABC? Tears for Fears? Kajagoogoo? Duran Duran for that matter? Meanwhile David Bowie is still God.

Luckily for Gaia, the hunger to learn and expand creatively also runs unbridled, and it’s not likely to be hindered in the near future. It’s mid semester at art school and Gaia cuts across campus and through a maze of hallways, staircases and backdoors like a rabbit on the loose in a field of clover.

The excited street artist has a visitor from Gotham, where the Gaia domestic animal kingdom has been stampeding periodically on the streets, and the chatty artist is eager to show new work that incorporates the metaphor: sculpture.

A muse takes on an added dimension (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

A muse takes on an added dimension (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

The rooster is the top of a boxed container, fired to a dark glistening finish, with a couple mistakes in glaze that may have dripped from a classmate’s project in the kiln. Nonetheless the rooster is going to be traveling to Brooklyn soon to be in a group show. It’s enthralling to see this third dimension added to the lino-printed black and white images that are normally associated with Gaia.

He had two tablets, but dropped one, so there will be only 5 commandments now. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

He had two tablets, but he dropped one. So there will be only 5 commandments now. (Gaia) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Then we look at another project, a small columnar statuette with animal head and human limbs with a glaze that is more like lumpy oatmeal than the originally intended porcelain finish. Mistakes of glaze don’t faze Gaia for some reason and while we talk the other students are working in the lab on bowls, urns, vases.

Gaia’s also making a cast from parts of a milking machine, the apparatus that is affixed to the teats of a cow to extract the days’ production of dairy. It’s from a class about symmetry and mass-production, or some similarly post-modern topic. Have you seen a cow with those milk-sucking tubes attached?

I have!

Milking Creative Commons License photo credit: smoodysarah

 

This is the first half of a two part article and interview with street artist Gaia.
Click here for Part II

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WK Interact Set to Explode in L.A.

"Blow Yourself Up" by WK Interactive
“If you believe the world will end in 2012 and you can’t do anything about it, maybe it’s better to blow yourself up when you feel like it,” says WK.  (photo WK Interact)

The clock has been set and is ticking until November 7 when stark street art fantacist WK Interactive detonates his latest cluster of objets at SUBLIMINAL PROJECTS in L.A.

Let's see what the little Missus packed in my lunch today... (WK Interact)
Let’s see what the little Missus packed in my lunch today… (WK Interact)  (photo WK Interact)

Always more than pleased to tap into your fears, the original Interactive street artist hand-stretches your comfort level with How to Blow Yourself Up, a corrosive blast of physical possibility and psychic uncertainty.

WK Interact
Where’s my key? Where’s my key? WK Interact (photo WK Interact)

Tune in next week for our Q&A with WK >>>>>>>>

Brooklyn Street Art: Some of these pieces look tempting to touch, but I’m afraid my hand might blow off.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-WK-Interactive-Blow-Yourself-Up-Nov-09-studio2111_CROP

WK Interact: By all means – touch………”

(final photo Adam Wallacavage)

SUBLIMINAL PROJECTS Presents
How To Blow Yourself Up
New Works by WK Interact
November 7 – December 5, 2009
Opening Reception: Saturday, November 7, 8 p.m. – 11 p.m.

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Faile gets Wood for Paris : Brooklyn Street Artists at FIAC this weekend

Better get these crated! We only have two days! (Faile) (courtesy Faile)
Better get these crated! We only have two days! (Faile) (courtesy Faile)

Brooklyn’s own (by way of Edmonton and Minneapolis) street artist duo Faile have announced that they are having a solo show in mid 2010 with New York gallerist Perry Rubenstein, who will now represent them here. In the meantime, this Thursday they will be debuting new works at the Cour Carrée du Louvre for the FIAC in Paris over the weekend.

Yes you did! (photo Jaime Rojo)
Yes you did! (photo Jaime Rojo)

You may remember those spinning carved wood sculptures that they were creating this past year or so which showed up on the street in North Brooklyn?

Native American
Native Americans are figuring more heavily into the puzzle these days in Faile pieces (courtesy Faile)

This new series that they are doing are similar but are arranged on one flat plane.  They also incorporate much of the ripped-torn imagery from pulp novel/graphic novel/print ads that may have appeared in the 1950’s and 60’s, along with text from ad slogans rearranged as non-sequitors. So, simple carvings, they are not. “We are calling them Wood Paintings”, says Patrick.

jg
A Wood Painting from Faile (courtesy Faile)

Currently they are focusing on new works in the studio and have a number of projects lined up for the new year. Keep your eyes open for a new print release in November!

(courtesy Faile)
This one references some graff peers, gold caps, and of course BROOKLYN! Damn Straight! (courtesy Faile)

www.faile.net
www.papermonster.net

And if you ever wondered what Faile listens to when they are in the studio, click on this below to check out the mix they made for The World’s Best Ever just released…

sound-advice-22-cover-large

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Bad Trains, Colorful Shags, Elisha Cook, and Master Stain: Saturday’s Brooklyn Street Art

Cold and rainy weather, obscenely bad public train service, great art!

Multi-colored Shag Head by Peru Ana Ana Peru at Brooklynite (photo Steven P. Harrington)
Multi-colored Shag Head by Peru Ana Ana Peru at Brooklynite (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Okay, the train service in Brooklyn was really bad this weekend. Talk to the artists community in the Gowanus Canal section of Brooklyn, who had worked so hard to publicize a large constellation of open studios (AGHAST) this weekend.  As if a shrinking economy isn’t bad enough, the trains/shuttle bus service to an area already poorly served by public transportation was so bad that some artists were forced to stuff themselves with the piles of the crackers and cheese they had set out for guests and drown their sorrows in Makers Mark –  by 3 p.m. Saturday… Not mentioning any names out of respect for their mothers.

Video inside a piece
Video screen of a shaggy headed actor sitting in front of a screen that has a shaggy headed actor on it. This screen was embedded in – yes – a canvass of a shaggy headed guy. The piece used wheat pasted drawings on paper, paint, dripping markers, and video. (detail) Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Similarly, just traveling to Bed Stuy we had to take a train to a shuttle bus to a train and endure 3 hours of precious life under flourescent light just to get around the People’s Republic of Brooklyn on Saturday night.  Grumpiness subsided when entering the warm gallery and shooting to the back yard to score a beer.  In the grey heart of urban cold darkness this show is a bright surprise that warms you up, although my phone pics are bad.

Surgeon General says that pipe smoking is dangerous for toddlers. Just so you know. (Peru Ana Ana Peru) (photo Steven P. Harrington)
Surgeon General says that pipe smoking is dangerous for toddlers. Just so you know. (Peru Ana Ana Peru) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

In the street art-to-gallery transition of the urban art/street art/graffiti art continuum you never know for sure if an artist can make the jump. Peru Ana Ana Peru did the jump in flying colors.

Most followers of the current street art events can readily recount some missteps by some and total train wrecks by others – but we love you and try to be positive. Anyway, bad news travels faster than helicopters after a balloon boy these days, so we wouldn’t need to report it, would we?

The original Balloon Children, in 3-D (Peru Ana Ana Peru) (photo Steven P. Harrington)
The original Balloon Children, in 3-D (Peru Ana Ana Peru) (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Blissfully, Peru Ana Ana Peru gave a jolt to the happy crowd on Saturday at Brooklynite – and it was tongue-in-cheek to cheek in the gallery space. From the “Goat Check” with pinatas hanging on a clothes bar, to the video screens embedded in the already multi-media canvasses, to the formal portraits with faces scratched out with a pen-knife, pieces brought sly smiles among even the smart-alecs in attendance.

Simple but horrid scenarios jumped to mind upon seeing this piece by Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Steven P. Harrington)
Simple but horrid scenarios jumped to mind upon seeing this piece by Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Adding to the excitement was a story circulating that their film entry into an International Film Festival competition had just been awarded first prize that day. Certainly their love for film was evident.

Stills from their films were mounted next to one another on this piece by Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Steven P. Harrington)
Stills from their films were mounted next to one another on this piece by Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Overall it was a fun, snarky, witty, surreal, sexy, colorful show – aptly combining their various interests and moving them forward.

That night BSA received a nice vinyl piece by Street Artist Billi Kid:

A freshly silkscreened over stencil portrait of much loved street art photographer Elisha Cook Jr.

Elisha Cook Jr. has been on the streets capturing street art for a while, and has a loyal fanbase, including Billi Kid
Elisha Cook Jr. has been on the streets capturing street art (among many other things) for a while, which has earned him a loyal fanbase, including Billi Kid.

At first glance we thought it was a tribute to Chris Stain’s work, and certainly there are similarities between this and Stain’s depictions of the working people.  But stencillists do have individual styles, and closer inspection reveals this to be true.

Chris Stain
Chris Stain on the wall (photo Jaime Rojo)

Says Mr. Kid, “Elisha Cook Jr. (AKA Allan Ludwig) and I have collaborated quite a bit on the streets as well as inside. He is one of my favorite photographers,” says Billi.

In fact you can see Elisha behind the wheel of one of Billi Kids’ favorite pink convertibles below:

Image by Billi Kid
Image by Billi Kid

Here is another collaboration between the two

Speaking of Chris Stain, he was busy putting up a piece Saturday night at “Art In General”

The fundraiser was to benefit the gallery and their artist in residence program. Art in General is nonprofit organization that assists artists with the production and presentation of new work. Also featured were works by Street Artists Cake and Cern.

The piece Chris did is of his son and his two friends from preschool last year.  Says Stain, “I took the photo at the aquarium in Coney Island and adapted it to the urban landscape.”

The new Chris Stain oil pastel and acrylic wash piece stands at 12'H by about 20'W.
The new Chris Stain oil pastel and acrylic wash piece stands at 12’H by about 20’W.

Instead of aerosol (mostly because the fumes would have killed some of the guests who had just plunked down some bucks to support the place ) he used oil pastel and acrylic wash.

“I like this technique because it shows the texture of the wall, although it’s more labor intensive than spray paint,” said Chris.  Luckily, he had some help from Kevin, Heather and Robin, and Art in General fed the crew. “It was good,” he said.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

For more on the Peru Ana Ana Peru show see

PERU ANA ANA PERU COLORFUL ABSURDITIES AT BROOKLYNITE
http://www.brooklynstreetart.com/theBlog/?p=5278

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Images of the Week 10.18.09

Images of the Week 10.18.09

Our Weekly Interview with the Street

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_1009

Know Hope
Time is Running Out on this INCREDIBLE OFFER!! (Know Hope) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Know Hope (Detail)
Know Hope (Detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Know Hope (detail)
Know Hope (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Mr. Term Limits

Mr. Burns for Mayor! (photo Jaime Rojo)

Read about Mr. Burns candidacy in yesterday’s Street Signals posting.

Hellbent
Hellbent for Bridges and Beer (Hellbent) (photo Jaime Rojo)

PorkWith a name like Pork you wouldn’t think it would be so pretty (Pork) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Pork (detail)
Pork (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Pork (detail)
Pork (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Pork Signed
Pork Signature (photo Jaime Rojo)

Revs
Revs and Espo (photo Jaime Rojo)

Skewville (Side A)
Skewville, Side A (photo Jaime Rojo)

Skewville (Side B)
Skewville, Side B (photo Jaime Rojo)

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Street Signals 10.17.09

Brooklyn-Street-Art-STREET-SIGNALS_1009

Los Angeles Spends 3.7 million Dollars to Remove Largest Graffiti Tag in America

NO, this was not a story lifted from The Onion, although it sounds like it. I don’t think the total amount is for that one tag, but rather the whole L.A. River.

Brooklyn is on the opposite coast of the US, so we don’t really know what it’s like to see the graff on the concrete of that river.

But California, the world’s 8th largest economy, is on the brink of financial calamity, school classes are ballooning to 45 students, and the rising price of fish tacos on the beach is negatively affecting the surfers.  Is today UPSIDE DOWN DAY?

As reported by Ed Fuentes in BlogDowntown.com, the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers hired contractors to spray over the giant tag and made a big show of it, complete with a press conference.

“At 2,000 feet long by 60 feet tall, the MTA tag near the 4th street bridge was said to be one of the largest graffiti tags in the United States.

On Thursday it proved plenty large enough for a press conference that included the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, a pair of City Councilmembers and the L.A. Sheriff’s department.” More here

NYC Mayoral Race ’09 HEATS UP with Bloomberg, Thompson, and Mr. Burns

Vote for Burns
Creative Commons License photo credit: ChrisGampat

Why limit the race for mayor to only ONE BILLIONAIRE? Spending like a drunken sailor during Fleet Week, Mike Bloomberg, the richest man in the state, has reportedly spent $16 for every $1 that his opponent Bill Thompson has.  Not so fast, Mike!  Here comes Mr. Burns, a real leader of the people and believer in democracy.

courtesy
photo David Hershkovits in Papermag.com

In a press conference Mr. Burns attacked the end-run Bloomberg did around election laws to get himself on the ballot for a third term. “The man shows no guts, he should have simply declared himself king over these slack-jawed troglodytes, I mean good citizens. But that’s democracy for you”

Recently these campaign posters for Mr. Burns have been appearing all over New York, indicating that he is taking the race very seriously.

Papermag.com

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Now Showing: Peru Ana Ana Peru Colorful Absurdities at Brooklynite

Now Showing: Peru Ana Ana Peru Colorful Absurdities at Brooklynite

 "...And Then We Jumped into the Abyss of Numbers: Memories in Absurdity From the Bowels of Peru Ana Ana Peru"

“…And Then We Jumped into the Abyss of Numbers: Memories in Absurdity From the Bowels of Peru Ana Ana Peru” opening October 17 at Brooklynite Gallery

Brooklyn-based street artists Peru Ana Ana Peru see action on the street as cinema in progress, full of color, adventure, and absurdity.

In fact, with their fantastical approach they are telling us what we already know; the logic of the street is illogical, so why begin to explain it. To embrace the swirling and jagged movement, color, texture, smell, sound, and architecture of the street is to embrace chaos theory. You can tell that Peru Ana Ana Peru find it invigorating.

Peru Ana (photo Jaime Rojo)

Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Jaime Rojo)

While graffiti culture has become somewhat codified in many respects, the rules of street art are being written before our eyes. Art theorists, facing ever-increasing irrelevance and impotence, find explanations being flushed out into the ocean as they clutch institutional inner-tubes to stay afloat. Street Art, or any name we finally settle on, is not going to be that easy to explain for a while.

PeruAna AnaPeru

Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Jaime Rojo)

While a public gallery curated by chaos is unsettling to many, Peru Ana Ana Peru have jumped into the abyss and brought riotous color and an ever twisting fantasy narrative that makes sense to – them?

Flying over the poppy fields (Peru Ana) (Jaime Rojo)

Peru Ana Ana Peru (photo Jaime Rojo)

Embracing the “traditional” wheat pasting is only one option, and while it may be the most pragmatic, don’t be surprised if they move their multi-media paintings, drawings, sculptures and video installations into the public sphere more in the future. And they will not be alone, if nascent trends in projection art (and technology), installation art, performance art, and flash mobs are an indication. Individuals are simply taking their voice to the street and claiming public space more than before.

Peru Ana Ana Peru (courtesy Brooklynite)

Peru Ana Ana Peru (courtesy Brooklynite)

Maybe the only irony in this first solo show by Peru Ana Ana Peru at Brooklynite Gallery opening is that it is located in a formalized gallery at all.  Bringing the abyss inside 4 walls, a ceiling, and a floor feels limiting.  But maybe that’s just my need to define Peru Ana Ana Peru and their work. Obviously the energy and vitality that steams out and around the colorful collection suggest that the idea of venue is no concern  to PAAP’s adventurous minds.  The calliope plays merrily on.

Peru Ana Ana Peru (courtesy the artist)

Peru Ana Ana Peru (courtesy the artist)

Brooklyn Street Art: Do your street pieces express fantasy or reality?
Peru Ana Ana Peru:
We are heavily drawn to the fantastic in our work, be it in street art, or even film to a certain extent. Perhaps this is an extension of our beginnings in the avant garde film/video scene more than anything else, but it’s something that seems to have stuck with us. More than that though, we find ourselves repeatedly drawn toward things of a more whimsical nature in our work, things that might express a ‘joy of life’ aspect of things, rather than a heavy handed ‘real life’ aesthetic. In addition to this, we are shamelessly addicted to color, and lots of it, so perhaps this lends itself rather nicely to the realm of fantasy


PERU ANA ANA PERU |

Brooklyn Street Art: What is the importance of cinema in your work?
Peru Ana Ana Peru:
We consider ourselves to be primarily filmmakers/video artists first, and artists/street artists after that. It is the medium that we are most comfortable in, and in which we feel we have the most to offer. In this sense, cinema is our most important undertaking, and we are most happy when we are working on our films.

Peru Ana Ana Peru (courtesy Brooklynite)

Peru Ana Ana Peru (courtesy Brooklynite)

Brooklyn Street Art: If Peru Ana Ana Peru had only one medium to express itself in, would it be painting, drawing, sculpture, or video?
Peru Ana Ana Peru:
It would most likely be film/video, but with the exception that inside the video we’d use paintings and drawings and sculpture and what not.

…And Then We Jumped into the Abyss of Numbers: Peru Ana Ana Peru even made a promotional video for their first solo show (above)

Brooklyn Street Art: How would you characterize the experience of mounting your first solo show?
Peru Ana Ana Peru:
Dizzying.

Three new pieces waiting to be hung for the show (photo courtesy the artist)

Three new pieces waiting to be hung for the show (photo courtesy the artist)

Brooklyn Street Art: Do the streets of New York have a particular personality that you speak to?
Peru Ana Ana Peru:
It feels like New York has different personalities that speak differently to everyone. And quite frankly, it wasn’t really until after our foray into the street art/graffiti world that we realized where we fit in to the whole scheme of things. It would seem that graff/street artists can be lumped into a category of people that, when it comes down to it, just want to be noticed, just want to be seen, by anyone really. And from this point, it would seem that New York’s personality is one of indifference, like a rude bartender in a busy bar, and that by trying to put your name out everywhere, you’re really just saying, ‘hey, bartender, get me a beer.’

Peru Ana Ana Peru (detail) (courtesy Brooklynite)

Peru Ana Ana Peru (detail) (courtesy Brooklynite)

Brooklyn Street Art: What messages would you hope the viewer will walk away with after seeing the work at Brooklynite?
Peru Ana Ana Peru:
That we are just getting started.

Video still from Peru Ana Ana Peru

Video still from Peru Ana Ana Peru

Brooklynite Gallery

…AND THEN WE JUMPED INTO THE ABYSS OF NUMBERS:
Memories in Absurdity From the Bowels of Peru Ana Ana Peru
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ……………………

October 17 – November 14
Brooklynite Gallery

OPENING NIGHT – October 17th, 2009, 7:00pm – 10:00pm

MUSICAL GUEST: BOMB SQUAD


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Brooklin & Brooklyn: São Paulo and MUNDANO

Brooklin & Brooklyn: São Paulo and MUNDANO

Banner-Hello-Brooklyn

Brooklyn isn’t just a borough of 2.2 million people in New York City, it is also a neighborhood in São Paulo, Brazil.

Pixel show 2007

Mundano by Stella Dauer

Creative Commons License photo credit: Stella Dauer

And guess what?  That’s right homie-lera, they have street art.

But that should not be a huge revelation to you by now.

Like my barber Pedro Fantilipaz says, “Street Art eees all ovah tha wooorrrrrl!”

Mundano, a street artist from the other BK, makes monster-type faces, and elongated forms using fat caps and thin ones, a smooth hand, and a playful eye. They are extreeeeeme closeups with flaring nostrils, big frowny lips, and ever-searching eyes. Sometimes 4 eyes, sometimes more.

"Líquen Vermelho" / "Red lichen" by Mundano at Factory Fresh (photo Steven P. Harrington)

“Líquen Vermelho” / “Red lichen” by Mundano at Factory Fresh (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Mundano was here in July doing a show with two other Brazilians, Loro Vez and Apollo Torez, where they installed a show at Factory Fresh Gallery, called “Lichen”.  Add these three dudes to the two Os Gemeos, and this summer it was like the Brasil World Cup of aerossolistas right here in Nova Lorque!

You Are a Slave of Consumption (Mundano)

“You Are a Slave of Consumption” – a bit of wisdom for the birds.(Mundano) (photo by Mike Ion)

Back home he makes many creatures everywhere, and he writes slogans and messages that harshly question the policies of the government regarding social policy. It was no surprise to see him muster enough English to make an observation about our materialistic society on one of his pieces here.

Mundano’s recreation of a cart commonly used by recyclers on foot in Brooklin. (photo courtesy Factory Fresh)

Right in the middle of the gallery in Bushwick, Mundano had installed a cart that was a facsimile of a cart (or “carroceiro”) that is commonly used in his town for people to gather discarded items and materials for recycling, an appreciable business there. While they were trolling our streets in a van looking for stuff to stock their gallery carroceiro, Mundano and his buddies were pretty shocked to find that here people throw out perfectly good stuff!

(Mundano)

Keep your eyes open – This one is on lockdown in Brooklyn (Mundano)

Yeah, I know that for sure, because that was my first apartment; one man’s broken Barcalounger is another man’s throne. Most college students and newly arrived immigrants in New York can easily furnish their entire apartments from discarded furniture and other stuff that people drag to the curb.  Even so, Mundano’s wild-eyed surprise and shock at how wasteful we are was an eye-opener for me too.

(Mundano)

(Mundano) (photo Mike Ion)

Now Mundano’s back in Brooklin and making new stuff there, where people have a different approach to his art on the street. He had a great time here and got to put up some entertaining pieces while staying in New York and he’s looking forward to his next visit, “I really liked New York, and I will be back for sure.”

Is Smoking Relaxing? (Mundano)

Is Smoking Relaxing? Mundano made a Musico puffing on a cigarro next to this anti-smoking ad in Brooklyn. (Mundano) (photo Mike Ion)

Cactus Corner (Mundano)

Cactus Corner (Mundano) (photo Mike Ion)

Quebre a rotina mas nao se quebre
Creative Commons License photo credit: Marco Gomes

Mundano’s Flickr page is HERE

Mike Ion images courtesy Mundano

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Thrilling Diversions on “HUMP” Day

Some days I come up Jack, Zilch, Nada – Nothing new from me on the “street art” tip.

Damn, son, sometimes I just wanna sit at a desk and skip across Magic Interweb-Land and look at porn look for incredible art-related videos that I think you’ll find inspiring and titillating educational.

And when I round the corner on that imaginary interweb street, I have no idea what I’m going to find.   So, it’s kind of like street art, except I don’t have to get off my arse.

But, whoaaa, what eye candy I found today!

Talk about Dropping Science!

So, if you want to blow your head off, check out this video from Neuro Sonic Audio Medical

And Just in Time for Day of the Dead

This music video includes ink drawings and cut-out figures, inspired by illustrator Edward Gorey. It was developed this year during an animation workshop at UCLA’s Department of Theater, Film and Television.

I know what this looks like…

Photo: toastforbrekkie

Photo: toastforbrekkie

Photo: toastforbrekkie

But it’s just an OPTICAL ILLUSION!  He’s not really going down on a big space missile. Get your mind out of the gutter, people!  Honestly. That would be vulgar and I would not post such a thing!

See more of what they call FORCED PERSPECTIVE photos here at Environmental Graffiti

And Finally, the Formation of the World in One Minute


The majority of today’s New Yorker’s have ADHD and absolutely no patience, or time, to wait around to see the formation of the world so Chris Cox jammed it in a minute for you.
And as AN ADDED BONUS, if you endure an additional 20 seconds you can see how the world all comes together in 250 million years, which is about how long it takes Joe at Fratellis deli to get me a coffee sometimes.
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