February 2010

Images of the Week 02.14.10

Our Weekly Interview With the Street

On Tuesday February 09 I found the roll up gates to the Deli on the corner of Bedford and N. 7 closed. I have never seen those gates down in my eleven years in the Burg. I was caught off guard and it made me anxious, until I learned that Al, the proprietor has passed away. It was with much sadness that I took this photo of a piece that Lister had done on those gates years ago. I dedicate this set of images to Al. He was gentle and kind and he was always jovial and ready to help you with whatever you need in his shop. RIP Al.

On Tuesday I found the roll-up gates to the Deli on the corner of Bedford and N. 7 closed. Located in the epicenter of rapidly gentrifying Williamsburg, I've not seen the gates ever down once since the 1990's. Besides the revelation of seeing the piece by Anthony Lister for the first time, I was a little confused to see it closed. Then I saw the cluster of lit candles and vases of flowers on the sidewalk by the entrance, and I learned that Al, the hard-working warm and friendly owner of the deli had passed away. Suddenly it was with sadness that I took this photo. Even though these images aren't specific to him, we dedicate this weeks images to Al, who really liked the street art in the neighborhood, and welcomed the artists who brought this neighborhood to life. Al was an example of what can make Brooklyn neighborhoods great - an open-hearted gentle and kind guy; he always had a moment to talk and joke with you and was always ready to help you with whatever you needed in his shop. R.I.P. Al and condolences to his family and friends. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Courtesy of your Friendly Neighborhood
A new alien piece by “Courtesy of your Friendly Neighborhood” (© Jaime Rojo)

Goons in Versace circa 1989
Goons in Versace circa 1989 (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Lost Boy. This artist puts out small pencil drawings with fantasy/mithological imagery
Yes, she looks a little underdressed for this kind of weather. Lost Boy (the artist) puts out small original pencil  or pen drawings with fantasy/mythological imagery (photo @ Jaime Rojo)

Lost Boy
Another Lost Boy (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Goons'  dinner specials
Goons’ dinner specials (photo @ Jaime Rojo)

Tazz
Tazz got a couple gold caps (photo @ Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Beef on a bed of Steve McQueen Skewville
Brooklyn Beef with Steve McQueen on the background Skewville (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Flash Light Boy
Miniature Dick Nixon singing into a flashlight (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Pet Bird
Pet Bird (photo @ Jaime Rojo)

Magnet Sculpture on metal door. Sculpture is hard to find in the street art
Magnet Sculpture on metal door. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Stop Matt Siren!
Stop Matt Siren before he bites! (photo © Jaime Rojo)

It is always very peaceful when the snow is falling
It is always peaceful when the snow is falling (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Valentines! Nothing Says “I Love You” Like Bad Theatre

It’s very important to understand some of the pivotal cultural influences that help shape today’s New York Street Art scene.

This is not one of them.  I think The Brick Theater in East Williamsburg/West Bushwick reliably produces some of the worst shows you are likely to ever see.  Truly wretched.

You’re Welcome is a collection of 5 small plays about creation and failure; a unified theatrical myth that tells the story of an invented band of performers and their catastrophic attempts at connection. The plays are also about love, death, desire, tragedy, comedy, drunk driving, sexiness, beauty, loss, the battle between good and evil, a baby born wearing a hat. And theater.  Kind of the last word on theater.

The Brick Theater is HERE

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Work In Progress 2: “Robots Will Kill” are Finishing Windows this weekend

RWK/BSA “Superior Windows Project”

Brooklyn Street Art-work-in-progress

6 down, 2 to go.

The Robots Will Kill guys have managed to keep all their digits from frost bite. That’s a good thing since they need them to paint. As passers by yell out words of praise and/or encouragement, Chris and Veng battle the gusts of cold wind coming up from the East River and hope that the ladders won’t tip onto the sidewalk.

Chris and Veng ask each other for advise constantly
Chris and Veng ask each other for advice continuously (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Veng goes up the ladders, cans in hand, and quickly gets in the zone, aided by his iPod and his headphones.

He loves to wear his headphones while painting because they help him with the noise and distractions of the street. That’s a good thing since on a recent afternoon a damsel in distress nearby on the sidewalk was on her mobile phone yelling all sorts of off-color adjectives and adverbs to her Lothario, almost threatening to kill herself if he didn’t come and pick up the phone.

He did not pick up the phone and she did not kill herself. Veng also did not stop painting.

Chris painting details
Chris applying finish touches (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Chris has finished his share of windows already.

He announced it with fanfare to Veng.  Veng acidly responded that it was easy for Chris to finish so fast since he only used three colors. Chris promptly corrected him and set the record straight.

He used four.

Fnish window
An homage to Hitchcock’s “Rear Window” perhaps?  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

YOU be the judge.

Detail
“Rear Window” (detail) with this curious teen and his RWK poster on the wall (photo © Jaime Rojo)

So THAT’S 6 WINDOWS DONE, 2 to go. If you are in the neighborhood this weekend you may have the opportunity to be ignored by Veng as he stands atop the ladder, carefully finishing the final windows.

If you can’t get there, don’t worry, we’ll show you the final “Superior Windows” next week when they are finished.

Veng working on is village
Veng working on his village (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Finish window
In Veng’s finished window you can see an old town cut in the middle by a modern highway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Detail
In this detail of the recently finished window you can see Veng’s homage to the street art website authored by photographers Luna Park and Becki Fuller, “The Street Spot”.

Rock it baby!
GABBA GABBA HEY! Snow on the window ledge adds to the effect in Chris’s dude rocking out  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Detail
Detail through a pine tree. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Stay tuned for more progress reports.

RWK in conjunction with BSA.

SEE THE LAST Work In Progress Report HERE

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Fun Friday 02.12.10

Fun-Friday

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FOR all you Valentines:

Copulation Dancing MEETS Extreme Sports

And AMAZING Art & Vector Insanity …MAJOR LAZER

Directed by Eric Wareheim

Edited and Animation by Zachary Johnson & Jeffery Max fatalfarm.com

Art and Vector Insanity by Kevin O’Neill & Karisa Senavitis willworkforgood.org

Produced by Clark Reinking

Says Will Work For Good, “We worked with Eric Wareheim on the aesthetic direction for his video for Major Lazer’s “Pon De Floor” featuring some of NY’s raddest dagga dancers. We wanted to take them off the typical club floor and put them on more mundane floors in an imaginary neighborhood where they could go about their business in private. All of the home environments were created as large paintings which were then photographed and transformed into a bizarre real estate fly-through by the dudes at Fatal Farm. Additionally we created a series of vector patterns used for the “otherworlds” featured throughout the video. All in all a sick mix of low/high tech and Eric’s always awesome visions.”

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FOR all you Would Be Valentines:

I’m sure you kids don’t remember this but WAAAYYYY BACK in the day before Virtual Lovemaking Suits, we had to Hook Up using CHAT and our imaginations

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Local Salsa Orchestra covers TV On the Radio

Hear their version while viewing this slideshow that features street art in Brooklyn

Not sure if we caught all of the street artists but I saw Gaia, FKDL, C215, Katsu, Poster Boy, Dude Co, Mark Cavalho… who else?

The Williamsburg Salsa Orchestra, based in Brooklyn NY, plays “Wolf Like Me” by TV On The Radio. Produced and arranged by percussionist Gianni Mano from forthcoming album, “Keys To The City”. Slideshow of local pics and street art are by Miss Heather at newyorkshitty.com.

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Hand-made Animation and Stop Action Camera Work

Early Animators used this same technique for experimenting with new stories (I just made that up. I’ve never seen this stuff before)

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“The Dirty Show” in Detroit for Valentines

s

courtesy Arrested Motion

“The Red Light Exhibit” is comprised of tantalizing talent including Shawn Barber, Paul Booth, Scott G. Brooks, Vincent Castiglia, Colin Christian, Molly Crabapple, Camilla D’Errico, Ewelina Ferusso, Michael Hussar, Michael Mararian, Dan Quintana, Celeste Rapone, David Stoupakis, The Dirty Fabulous, Brian Viveros, Tony Ward, & Jasmine Wort. Curated by Genevive Zacconi, in association with Last Rites Gallery, the show will be held at The Dirty Show in Detroit.

See more images and learn more at Arrested Motion

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The Sexy “Street Crush” Show from Brooklyn Street Art a year ago.

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Very Sad to Hear the News of the Passing of Alexander McQueen

What the heck does this have to do with street art and graffiti art? Hang out till the second part of this video. We won’t likely forget his famous robotic spray-painting of a white dress in ’99.

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Brooklynite Pairs Emerging Talents : “STEALTH: ARTISTS ABOVE THE RADAR”

Brooklynite Pairs Emerging Talents : “STEALTH: ARTISTS ABOVE THE RADAR”

THE NETHERLANDS & TEXAS join forces for a new art show in New York! Could you find greater opposites? How about

Sarah Palin and Angela Merkel ? Judas Priest and Dan Deacon ? Shakespeare and the Cast of “Jersey Shore”?

The invitation for Stealth

The invitation for Stealth Above the Radar (by Derek Shumate)

 

Brooklynite Gallery is pairing Collin Van Der Sluijs, a Dutchman from the Netherlands, with Derek Shumate from Houston for Saturday’s “Stealth: Above the Radar” show, and these two share one thing in the eyes of the gallery.“We strongly felt that these two emerging artists deserved a bigger stage to showcase their exceptional talent,” says Rae McGrath of the Bed Stuy venue. Enough said.

The gallery has championed under-exposed artists in the past, and this time they bring two guys whose minds are Cuisinarts of colorful cultural and historical references, spilling out and across their canvasses.  Each guy has a different set of figures and forms, animal and mineral, calligraphy and patterns, but there is a similarity in assembly, self referencing, and even in their processes.

BSA had an opportunity to talk to both artists, see some of the new work that will be shown, and find out more about them.

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Brooklyn Street Art: How would you describe your style of painting?

Collin Van Der Sluijs: Most of the time I’m working on paintings about my life, so for me it’s autobiographical work that I make. I take little aspects (or big ones) from my daily life, and I translate them into my images.

Collin Van Der Sluijs "Float"

Collin Van Der Sluijs “Float” (courtesy Brooklynite)

Derek Shumate: My style? Usually I tell people “Mixed-Medium” or “Abstract” but I feel as if it’s much more than that. At times I feel like we’re all going through similar experiences, facing dire straits and that this artwork pouring out is a result of this energy. We’re all bombarded with information on a daily basis and multi-tasking to survive in this confusing world that seems to be speeding off the rails.

Derek Shumate "Make it Rain"

Derek Shumate “Make it Rain” (courtesy Brooklynite)

Brooklyn Street Art: Both of you guys’ work contain many different elements, ranging from figures to textures to shapes and text. Can you talk about how you assemble your work, or how you decide on what is included?

Collin Van Der Sluijs: Basically, some elements appear in my work during the process of making it. Sometimes I also erase things when they don’t match with the things that are happening in my head.

 

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A view inside Collin’s studio.

Derek Shumate: I don’t really have a defined process. Basically I’m always gathering bits and particles of things I like that come through my life and I spend vast amounts of time filtering it out into what you see. A lot of the elements in my larger paintings are fragments of prints and other works I’ve done in the past. I’ll also mix in stuff from my childhood sketchbooks.

 

Derek Shumate "Live Forever" (courtesy Brooklynite)

Derek Shumate “Live Forever” (courtesy Brooklynite)

It really depends on the mood of the piece. I start by putting down a few layers of colors and take it from there. Once I grasp a concept I start to hide little relevant elements as I build up the piece to something that works for me compositionally. Regardless, every piece contains various mediums such as inks, oils and acrylics. It’s almost as if I’m just attempting to harmonize everything I’ve got onto the surface at hand.

 

Collin Van Der Sluijs "Infinity" (courtesy Brooklynite)

Collin Van Der Sluijs “Infinity” (courtesy Brooklynite)

 

Brooklyn Street Art: Collin, you have talked about consumer behavior and it’s affect on your work. How does it impact your work?
Collin Van Der Sluijs: I grew up in a small village and it’s still fun to see big cities. I travel a lot but it always surprises me when there is a 70% off sale sign in the window of a big shopping mall and I see everybody lines up like sheep. You know what I mean? I think about this and its’ visual communication. I like it and hate it at the same time. I think of these kind of things when I work.

 

Derek Shumate "JWB" (courtesy Brooklynite)

Derek Shumate “JWB” (courtesy Brooklynite)

Brooklyn Street Art: Derek, you use a lot of collaged pieces and textures and the occasional figure. Do you ever think of doing portraiture?

Derek Shumate: Sometimes. I’ve had ideas to do a series of different people like politicians, pop icons and other people of influence. I feel as if I’m heading more in that direction because there’s so much going on in the world right now and I want to put these people that are in charge into a new light, so-to-speak. You’ll probably see more portraiture from me in the future.

 

Derek hanging out on a fire escape working out ideas in a sketchbook. (image courtesy the artist)

Derek hanging out on a fire escape working out ideas in a sketchbook. (image courtesy the artist)

Brooklyn Street Art: Does Street Art influence you in any way Collin?
Collin Van Der Sluijs: Well, not really to be honest, I’m basically a studio artist. In 1999 and 2000 street art was big in my town, but a lot of people put like 3 stickers up somewhere and build a reputation out of that. That’s lame. There are some people I admire in the street art scene, but I think I can count them on my ten fingers.

 

One of Collins' studio

One of Collins’ pieces in the studio references the effect of consumer garbage on the innerworkings of natural life.

Brooklyn Street Art: How about you Derek, does Street Art play a part in your creative life at all?

Derek Shumate: Most Definitely. The streets of Brooklyn to be specific.
I lived in New York for a few years and I would walk the streets on a daily basis, absorbing not only the art but also the weathered architecture and other surfaces.
I’d document and participate in the organic, collaborative atmosphere we were all creating.

 

Derek doing a Waldo (image courtesy Derek Shumate)

Doing a Waldo (image courtesy Derek Shumate)

I felt at home with creativity and potential everywhere I’d look. I’d never before interacted with my environment in such a way. I’ve got photo collections of all the street art and graffiti I admire from different cities I’ve visited over the years. However, nothing that I’ve found has the charm that exists in Brooklyn.

Brooklyn Street Art: Collin, what’s your favorite part of the creative experience?

Collin Van Der Sluijs: When things go wrong. Then, with a little adjustment I can make it good again, or better. Small things like that put the strawberry on the cake, for me.

 

Collin-Van-Der-Sluijs "Ephemeral"

Collin-Van-Der-Sluijs “Ephemeral” (courtesy Brooklynite)

Brooklyn Street Art: Collin says he likes when things go wrong! Derek, what’s your favorite part of the creative experience?

Derek Shumate: Finishing the piece! Well, not really. That’s a great feeling but of all the other parts I’d have to choose that moment where I’m completely lost in the piece and absolutely nothing else in the world matters. I’m sure anyone who creates is familiar with this amazing feeling.

 

Derek painting a bucket in his studio.

Derek at work in his studio.

But like Collin, I also like it when you totally f*ck something up but then later you realize it was the most perfect mistake that could have ever happened because it leads you in directions you never thought you’d venture to and takes your skills and pieces to new heights.

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CLICK THIS INVITE to go to Brooklynite

CLICK THIS INVITE to go to Brooklynite

 

ARTISTS ABOVE THE RADAR
Collin Van Der Sluijs •  Derek Shumate
Feb. 13 – March 6
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Brooklynite Gallery
334 Malcolm X. Blvd.
Brooklyn, New York 11233
347-405-5976

Collin Van Der Sluijs http://www.collinvandersluijs.com

Derek Shumate http://www.derekshumate.com

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Fuggeddabout Vancouver! These are Da Brooklyn Olympics!

BRONZE, SILVER, and GOLD Tooth Caps to be bestowed upon BROOKLYNIPIANS.

Brooklynite Gallery transformed the backyard into an outside WINTER SPORTS ARENA overnight thanks to the Blizzard of ’10 !

Amid the hugh and clamor of setting up their first show of the year this Saturday, Rae and Hope have managed to put out a call for all LUGE competitors for the big event

This year introduces a new event to the games called "La Crusher", involves skis, a sled, brass knuckles and kung fu.
This year introduces a new event to the games called “La Crusher”, which involves skis, ballet, a sled, brass knuckles and kung fu moves.

As your first feat of Olympian strength and to qualify for the competition, all applicants will be required to watch this video in it’s entirety:

According to 16-year-old Canadian “jazz-pop” singer, Nikki Yanofsky, “The song is just such a universal message. It doesn’t even need to be applied to the Olympics.”

GO FOR THE GOLD!!

20750

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Pufferella Takes It Kinda Personal: “I know You Are But What Am I”

Pufferella Takes It Kinda Personal: “I know You Are But What Am I”

Factory Fresh Presents: Pufferella “I know You Are But What Am I” and Josh Mccutchen “Polymetrochromanticism”

It’s only a one-week show folks, and Adam has built a sit-n-spin ride that will make you blow all that Genesee Cream Ale like Linda Blair around the front gallery, so you don’t want to miss this opening!

 

Wanna Ride? Created by Ad Deville for Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Wanna Ride? A sit-n-spin for four created by Ad Deville for Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Before we go to the show, a little background; Street Artist Pufferella has played a pivotal role in the New York Street Art scene by running Orchard Street Art Gallery for 7 years with Ad Deville on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, opening the doors and clearing the way for many aspiring graffiti writers and street artists to show their work in a new public setting, many for the first time.

After losing their lease due to greedy landlords, they moved to Bushwick in Summer 2008 to open Factory Fresh, another gallery that opened it’s arms to emerging and better-known street artists and fine artists.  On her own, Pufferella has quietly established her own fine art work, consisting primarily of sewn pieces that may be more traditional flat “canvasses” or full-blown soft sculptures.

 

Pufferella

“That sewing machine is like my baby,” Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Taking a break from the sewing machine, Pufferella shows us the inner sanctum of her office at Factory Fresh, which is carefully hung with fabric pieces for the show, effectively blocking all eyes from seeing in the window or over the counter.

The collection of new pieces are brightly colorful, boldly warm. The shiny solid shapes and figures are stiffly posed in simple arrangements, floating in awkward proximity to one another, creating a momentary scene or flash of action.  Sewn on lush fabrics, they can take special importance because of the spareness in number and bluntness of geometry.

It’s when these pieces are finished and seen together as a group that Pufferella can get overwhelmed with their significance and she questions if she has been too open as an artist.  Speaking about her art and her life, a dual set of impulses emerge – frequently warring with one another.  It may be this ongoing conflict that gives many of the pieces a raw energy that is captured in action.

Brooklyn Street Art: I don’t see as much sexual activity in this show as I thought I would.
Pufferella:
Oh, yeah?  There’s I’d say a good third of the show has those themes. There are some other things going on. Like the tigers!  They are so cute I want to take them home with me.

 

Pufferella

Two new tigers hanging out by Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: So, about these various couples in positions… do you like to imagine sexual relations in unusual places?
Pufferella:
I think these are all personal things.  Stuff I’ve done or things I think about.  I’m very private but I’d say I’m a little wild in certain places.

Brooklyn Street Art: Well, this is the thing; You feel like it is very private and yet you are holding an exposition of it in a very public way.
Pufferella:
Isn’t that what art is? Aren’t you supposed to put your soul into it? If I was like, “what am I doing?” then I would produce graphic design.  So for me it is that pure.  I’m not doing it to sell it, necessarily.  So that’s why it’s like, “I think it would be funny if cotton candy fell in love with carrot.”

 

Hanky-panky in the castle with the prince. Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

A little hanky-panky in the castle with the prince. Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Do you ever have problems or fights with your sewing machine?
Pufferella:
Yeah, I mean, I have to oil it, take care of it. I know what the problems are. That sewing machine is like my baby.

When stuff falls out of place, like the pins fall out or I get sliced by stuff, I get pissed. Like when stuff moves and you get a ripple and you have to go back… I spend a lot of time fixing stuff.  But I also know what I’m doing wrong.  There’s a backing that I’m supposed to put on all of this and my mom gives it to me.  She’s like, “Why aren’t you using this?” but I don’t like the way it comes out.  It comes out so “crafty”.

So I like it to be a little messed up.  Like those kinks and things, I think for me, are what really keeps it “art”. I don’t know.

Brooklyn Street Art: So it’s an effect that you don’t like when you see it, like it has too much of a “finished” quality.
Pufferella:
Well, I come from quilters too, and I went to art school and they didn’t because they were farm people who made beautiful quilts, to keep them warm, and they did them nicely.  So, I try to differentiate.  I know what that (quilting) is, and I’ve tried but I’ve come close.

Brooklyn Street Art: You are afraid of becoming too “crafty”?
Pufferella:
Definitely. I think people expect this work to be “craft”. It’s like “appliqué”  – like what’s the defining line between me and appliqué?  Very little, but I’m hanging on to it.

Brooklyn Street Art: Right, there is a fine line… where suddenly someone is saying, “Can you make a pillow for me?”
Pufferella:
And I have done that. Like I did Abe Lincoln Jr.’s bird. But I made it poop and poop-balls came out of it. Yeah the other thing that makes it “art” is the idea.  I think when people make quilts they look at patterns.

 

A Cat and Dog scene from Pufferella's 2005 show at Pink Pony (Image courtesy Pufferella)

A Cat and Dog scene from Pufferella’s 2005 show at Pink Pony (Image courtesy Pufferella)

Brooklyn Street Art: Some of these themes are related to circus or performance or childhood fantasy?
Pufferella:
Yeah, I guess that I feel like it is always coming back to those things. Like my 2005 show at Pink Pony, where I made a circus.  I guess that is just what I think about a lot.  Funny, carnivale, freaks.  I feel like I’m very normal on the outside but very weird on the inside.

Brooklyn Street Art: Can you give me three adjectives?
Pufferella:
For me?

Brooklyn Street Art: Don’t think about it.
Pufferella:
Shiny. Giggly. Dark.

 

Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

More action on the fairgrounds. Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Okay.
Pufferella:
Like I think there is that dark humor to everything.

Brooklyn Street Art: Like “Funhouse” humor.
Pufferella:
Yeah.

Brooklyn Street Art: Did you go to state fairs, or county fairs when you were a kid?
Pufferella:
Yes, and I think I have that dual nature because my parents were raised on farms, but then they moved and raised us in a different life. We traveled and did all these things that they didn’t really do. So I think there is that dual thing.  Like sometimes they were having us milk cows but then taking us to New York City.  It was always that way.  I grew up in Morristown, New Jersey, which is just outside New York.  I did the whole club thing at 16, but I had these roots where I would go back to Michigan and see my Grandma.

 

"The Perfect Wife" by Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

“The Perfect Wife” by Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Did you tell me this is the ideal woman?
Pufferella: “The Perfect Wife” Yeah, that piece is about how I don’t feel like I get heard a lot of times. Like I have to say stuff a bazillion times. I might as well be like a video game playing and I might as well have my shirt off.  That’s the whole thing with guys. Like I might as well just be serving drinks, playing music, with the mute button on.

 

Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: What about this powerful image? Can you describe her?
Pufferella: “You Must Be This Tall To Ride” – this porn pose, like she is stripper dancing, but giving you a rule. It’s like a sign for entering an amusement park ride.  So the top of the leg would indicate the height the person must be, and then the other meaning could be for sex.  Like it could say “to ride me”, but it doesn’t.  That one came about from preparing for a show I was supposed to do with Thundercut and Gaëtane (Michaux), but it got cancelled.  So we were all supposed to do a sign.

Pufferella

“You Must Be This Tall To Ride”, Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: So it is this “come-on” pose coupled with this rejection at the same time.
Pufferella:
It is, isn’t it? It could be used for a boy or a girl. She’s very bold.  I think that’s the boldest piece I’ve probably done, with all that hair.

Detail

Detail from “You Must Be This Tall To Ride”, Pufferella (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: It’s full of energy and action and movement and power.
Pufferella: Yeah, it’s funny, I have a hard time looking at that one.  Sometimes when I’m all done, I actually cry. I don’t really like my work.


Brooklyn Street Art:
Really?
Pufferella:
Yeah, like I had a breakdown. Just looking at all of it and what it all means, and really kind of having that put in your face, in a way, it’s like “maybe this is the reality”. Like “What am I trying to say? Why is this what comes out of me?”

Brooklyn Street Art: It’s revelatory, perhaps.
Pufferella:
Yeah, I guess. Like I do the drawing, and I guess it doesn’t mean as much as what it ends up being in the end when it comes to life.


Brooklyn Street Art:
That’s interesting how it causes discomfort and emotional turbulence.
Pufferella:
Yeah, I probably wouldn’t do this show if I could back out now.  Now that it’s all ready to go I would probably not show it. Because it is like “what am I doing?”  The work is very personal I guess.

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Pufferella has been sewing creations for the front room and Josh McCutcheon will be showing himself publicly for the first time in the back room.

And now for your viewing pleasure, a promotional video for the show done by Pufferella’s dearest friends at PLAZTIK MAG

Polymetrochromanticism

The Artwork of Josh Mccutchen

Josh McCutchen lives and works in Bushwick, Brooklyn and this is his debut show at Factory Fresh. His narrative works are about mythology, science & technology, social commentary, body image, polymorphic shapes, and abstract urban landscapes.

As a television personality Josh hosted “Does This Look Infected” on MTVU network from 2005-2007. When he’s not painting modern masterpieces, Josh is the host, writer, producer, and editor of the Josh McCutchen Show. You can see him in action at http://www.youtube.com/joshmccutchen

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Pufferella’s Site is HERE

Factory Fresh Site is HERE

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BSA Exclusive FAILE & BAST before the Deluxx Fluxx

Scenes from The Faile Bast Deluxx Fluxx Arcade

Faile & Bast three Brooklyn street art creative forces of nature are mounting an experiential exhibition at Lazarides Greek Street Gallery in London right now. Longtime collaborators, the trio have combined their signature elements to create a distinctive conceptual show that includes an arcade installation, the Virgin Mary, Humpty Hump, and high-heeled boots.

Here are some behind-the-scenes teasers from street art photographer Ian Cox.

Lazarides Greek Street Gallery is be-decked with new wildness from Faile and Bast
“Just a little more flourescent pink and orange, and we can throw the doors open!”  Lazarides Greek Street Gallery is be-decked with new wildness from Faile and Bast.

A begging dog, high-heeled stilleto boots, and a soapbox - looks like the S&M Circus is back in town!

The Stars and Zig-Zags Forever.

The Stars and Zig-Zags Forever.

A bit of Bast's Humpty Hump and a Bit of Faile.

A bit of Bast's Humpty Hump and a Bit of Faile.

See more of Ian’s images HERE.

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Chocolate & I, New York Presents: “FOOD FOR ART. ART FOR THOUGHT”

Food for Art. Art for Thought.

brooklyn-street-art-ema-chocolate-and-I-new-york

Food for Art. Art for Thought.

Feb. 8-14, 2010

Chocolate & I, New York
511 W. 25 Street, 4th Floor
New York, NY10001

Chocolate & I, New York is excited to showcase recent works from both established and emerging artists revolving around the relationship and characteristics society attributes to chocolate and the way it affects us on a personal level. Join us on February 11th and view the work of Elim Chen, Ema, C&T, Jason Krugman, Michelle Mayer, Carolina Vallejo, Asli Sevinc & Charnan Lewis.

Reception: Thursday Feb. 11, 9p-11. Music performance by Rifle Recoil.

Hours:
Mon, Tue, Wed, Fri: 4p to 7p
Thur: 4p to 11p
Sat: 2p to 11p
Sun: 2p to 9p

Hedonistic Cloud – EMA.
For this year’s CINY, Ema will prepare a mixed media mural installation that will take you into a delicious visual exploration of her imaginary characters’ relationship to chocolate and other hedonistic practices.

Chocolate Timepiece – C&T.
4 chocolate drippers hang from the ceiling dripping chocolate onto large stainless plates on the floor. Each of the 4 drippers drip at different increments. One drip per second, one drip per minute, one drip per hour, and one drip per day. The drip hits the plate on the floor, creating a distinct sound of chocolate dropping. Over time, each of the 4 plates accumulate different size mounds of chocolate.

Firefly, LED basket – Jason Krugman.
Firefly is a modular LED matrix that visualizes the wind. It transforms wind into a sparkling force that embeds the environment with a sense of magic. LED basket is an exploration into the possibilities of 3-dimensional electro-luminescent LED structures. The concept of LED Weaving, is a new and uncharted territory.

Conflict Confection – Michelle Mayer.
This installation will be a twist on a luxury chocolate shop. I will be making gold leafed chocolate bullets. When approaching the subject of chocolate, one of the most delectable and cherished luxury good on the planet, it is interesting to consider its origins. Chocolate’s main ingredient is the seed of the cacao tree, discovered 2,000 years ago in the tropical rainforest of Americas. Ivory Coast’s cocoa industry, the largest producer in the world accounting for 40% of world production and selling to Mars, Kraft and Nestle among others, is highly controversial. The extremely profitable cocoa fields in the region have been a major source of funding both for the rebel armies in the north and the government in the south. An investigation by anti-corruption organization Global Witness found that in the most recent conflict, the civil war of 2002, $112m was illegally diverted towards war materiel by both sides from cocoa sales. Thousands died. Global Witness further allege that the two sides in the civil war, which recently signed a peace accord and are said to be disarming, are continuing to draw profit from the sector through embezzlement and corruption. The war has undermined cocoa prices for farmers who until recently had been able to sell their beans direct to companies for a reasonable profit, but who are now reliant on buyers thanks to the destruction of he transport network, who are gouging them over prices. As a result, despite growing demand for cocoa and rising prices on world markets, farmers have been receiving less. The $1.2bn industry has also come in for fierce criticism for its child labor practices, with a recent expose by a major newspaper tracking child slaves across the continent and finding that the number of enslaved could be as high as 12,000. Food for thought.

You Will Eat My Words; A Writing Piece – Carolina Vallejo.
Chocolate is often used as antidote for sadness, loneliness and heartbreaks. When bitting a piece of good chocolate and feeling it melting in the mouth an immediate sense of relief, sexiness and seduction comes to mind. You are taken care of. Chocolate is there for you. In You will eat my words I will craft bitter chocolate pieces into words and will offer them to the public. I will be transcribing texts written by me in the past: private letters to ex-lovers, thoughts that have been cumulating years and dust on piles of notebooks. I will set an installation that will look like a desk and will carefully make a dark chocolate and sea salt mix that will become my writing material. Pieces of each text will become chocolate for others, giving that old sorrow a new life as a comforting piece to give brief and instant happiness to others. Each piece of chocolate that I will make will be carefully packed and will have a label with the date the original text was written. Suggestions on the most appropiate time to eat that particular chocolate will also be given.

Chocolate Road, Freddie Got Smallpox, Happy Accidents – Charnan Lewis. Chocolate Road, Freddie Got Smallpox, Happy Accidents – Charnan Lewis.
T. Charnan Lewis’ pointillist paintings use unusual materials to trace the changing landscape and material culture of the West. Large canvases covered in countless candy dots imagine distorted variations of pop imagery. For example, a blond character from Scooby-Doo, wrapped in a Washington Redskins blanket and suffering from smallpox, surveys the landscape in a scene that recalls classic American representations of Indians as noble savages. In such work, viewers confront the ambiguities of U.S. history, and, at the same time, experience such imagery in the unusual medium of candy, an invitation to literally consume the work. In more recent work, Styrofoam dots affixed to contact paper are colored to create landscapes. Here, the tension between the natural and the unnatural further complicate our experience of the paintings. Styrofoam is at once extremely unnatural-it is a strange, almost otherworldly, petrochemical-derived material, a trademark of the Dow chemical company-and extremely natural-we encounter it every day, and it could be considered a symbol of the mundane. The “natural” landscapes Lewis paints in Styrofoam are themselves impossible to imagine outside of our history of representing such landscapes. That is, by using pointillism, Lewis recalls the whole tradition of painters who have sought to reimagine the natural world within a frame. But by using Styrofoam, she suggests the extent to which any such representation is a product of history and culture. Ultimately, her progression from sugar to petrochemicals recalls the shifting economies of global capitalism over the past several hundred years and the resulting cultural production they have engendered.

I Need You to Need Me – Elim Chen.
I want to arise the awareness of the fact that everyone needs to feel they’ve been needed, and it’s ok to admit we’re needy sometimes. To do that, I made two “needy objects”, they need the owner’s attentions to make them work. One is an alarm clock, to stop the alarm, the owner needs to hug it. The other one is a speaker, the volume will go crazy when the owner is not around. The owner needs to pet it to make it calm down.

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GOETHE-INSTITUT WYOMIN BUILDING PRESENTS: “WHOLETRAIN” FILM SCREENING + CONVERSATION

Wholetrain. 2006. Written and directed by Florian Gaag. With Mike Adler, Florian Renner, Elvas M’Barek, and Jacob Matschenz. 89 min. In German with English subtitles. The screening of Wholetrain will be followed by a conversation between director Florian Gaag and graffiti writer Pure TFP.

With his fantastic cinema debut WHOLETRAIN Florian Gaag tells the story of a crew of four “writers” – David, Tino, Elyas und Achim – who observe the hierarchies, the values, the rules and the codes of the graffiti scene. Night after night they make off for the subway stations of the city, intent on leaving opulent images behind. But as another crew appears on the scene, and the four feel challenged, a creative battle ensues, one that will change the lives of these young people forever.

WHOLETRAIN is an exciting and emotionally gripping drama, one that explores for the first time the secret universe of the graffiti scene. The protagonists exist in a breathless state, suspended somewhere between two worlds: their day to day life, and their existence within the crew. Florian Gaag manages to recount a tale coloured by tension and aggression. The result is a many-sided portrait of characters whose world has never been documented in this way before. Their subculture remains authentic and realistic. Edgy editing and grandiloquent camerawork, a pulsating soundtrack and an excellent ensemble of actors, make WHOLETRAIN a film experience not to be missed.

The soundtrack was written and produced by Florian Gaag, who worked with legendary figures like Hip Hop greats KRS-One, Freddie Foxxx, O.C., Planet Asia, Afu-Ra, Grand Agent, Tame One, Akrobatik and El Da Sensei. Florian Gaag also collaborated with internationally renowned graffiti writers Neon, Won, Cemnoz, Pure and Ciel to create artwork for the film.

Wholetrain

Film Screening + Conversation

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010, 7:00pm

Goethe-Institut Wyoming Building

5 East 3rd Street (at Bowery)

New York, NY 10003

Tel.: +1 (212) 439-8700

Closest Subway: 6 at Bleecker Street

Admission is free, no reservations required.

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