April 2010

C215 Donates a Smoking Piece to the Auction Benefit

It isn’t unusual to look at the heavily lined faces of this artist and find that you drift away for a moment, lost in a thought. This particular portrait by French street artist C215 of Jon Cartwright has appeared on the streets of New York, London, Paris, and Sao Paulo.* C215, well known for his intricate stencils and portraits of people that somehow allow their inner glow to come out, generously donated this piece for the Street Art New York Silent Auction Benefit this Saturday.

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Using the bottom side of what was once a letterpress sorting drawer of heavy wood, C215 chooses a subject that looks off into a haze of smoke, reflecting for a minute on the issue of the moment, or remembering someone, a conversation, or a phrase.

* source Metro.co.uk

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BILLI KID AND LUNA PARK PRESENT: “EAMES INSPIRATION”

CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE
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FOR  IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEDIA RELATIONS
Billi Kid
bk@publicworksdept.com
(646-228-4140)

Public Works Department’s ‘Eames Inspiration’ Online Charity Auction to Benefit
Operation Design, a Creative Mentorship Program for NYC Public School Students
Limited-Edition Collection of Eames Chairs Re-Imagined by 20 Graffiti and Street Artists to be Featured in Barneys New York Windows.

May 11th through June 1st

Aakash Nihalani, Billi Kid, Blanco, Cake, Celso, Cern, Damon Ginandes, Darkcloud,
David Cooper, Elbow-Toe, James and Karla Murray, Joe Iurato, Matt Siren, NohJColey, Peru Ana Ana Peru, Skewville, Sofia Maldonado, Stikman, UR®New York and Veng.

April 14, 2010 (New York, NY) – The Eames Foundation, Eames Office and Herman Miller have teamed up with the Public Works Department of New York to present an online auction featuring a unique collection of iconic Eames® Molded Plywood Chairs as re-imagined by some of today’s most celebrated graffiti and street artists.  Beginning May 11th, the limited edition “Eames Inspiration” collection will be on display in the windows of Barneys New York

(Madison Avenue and 61st Street) and auctioned online to benefit OPERATION DESIGN, a creative mentorship program that organizes architects, artists and related professionals to work with New York City public school students to create motivating and inspiring projects.

MORE INFO FOR THIS EVENT TO UPDATED LATER

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Images of The Week 04.18.10

Our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Aakash Nihalani, Jaime Rojo, REVS, Banksy, Celso, Woodward Gallery, El Sol 25, Veng (RWK), QRST, Emma, Lattice Crow,

Aakash Nihalani
A geometric box flower blooms for 70’s power rock. (Aakash Nihalani) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Revs
REVS is in the soup. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Could this be Bansky checking out the poster for his "documentary"
Could this be Bansky checking out the poster for his “documentary”? YOU decide what the truth is. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

See the BSA review of “Exit Through the Gift Shop”

Celso pays homage to a Modern Master
Celso pays homage to a Modern Master at Woodward Gallery’s outside installation (photo © Jaime Rojo)

"I give up. How many time do I have to tell you to not leave your shoes outside!"e
“I give up. How many times do I have to tell you:  Don’t leave your shoes outside!” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

El Sol 25
Edwin Von Hopper strains to remember the rules about mixing stripes with plaid. (El Sol 25) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Veng RWK
Veng RWK (photo © Jaime Rojo)

QRST
QRST (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Emma has beef on her face
Emma has beef on her face (Emma, Buildmore (?)) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Lattice Crow with Sword
Lattice Crow with Sword (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Fallin' in Love
Fool in Love, yeah (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Fun Friday 04.16.10 : “Glamorous” Pandemic Takes Street Art to the Mall for a “Photo Shoot”

Scenes of Glamorous Pandemonium in Brooklyn

It seemed innocent enough, the invitation said it was a “Closing Party” for the very successful “Stokenphobia” show with GoreB and a cast of thousands at Pandemic Gallery last Saturday night. To our shock and utter glee, it was rock-out with your wig-out, replete with cameras, costumes, props and backgrounds to boot.  Before it all devolved into a silly soup of smeared lipstick on collars and assorted body parts, an assemblage of posing and preening was captured in the moment.

Hold on a sheckunt honey, Momma jus gonna have a little of thish cake.
Hold on a sheckund honey, Momma jus gonna have a little of thish cake.

"You, the bow-legged one, yeah, wass your name? Damn, that sounds sexy!"
“You, the bow-legged one, yeah, wass your name? Damn, that sounds sexy.”

Identities have been hidden to protect the guilty.
Identities have been hidden to protect the guilty.

And this season's ingenue....
And this season’s ingenue….

“AND IIIIIII-EEE-IIIIIIIIII WILL ALWAYS LUV UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU !”

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You want fries with that?
"You better be good to me!"

"You better be good to me!"

See more of the stunning array of glamouuuur at their Flickr page

All images courtesy of Pandemic Gallery and © Derrick Y. Noh.

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JMR Solo Show Tonight, and His Donation to the Silent Auction

JMR has arrived back in New York from Dallas, where he’s living these days, for the occasion of his solo show at Mighty Tenaka this Friday and to deliver his contribution to the Street Art New York Silent Auction Benefit.

JMR takes his usual pristine ne0-abstract lines and let’s them run in a new direction here – downward. An experienced muralist who can knock out 40 foot long walls in a couple of days, you can see his work on a building sized mural at the Pod Hotel in Manhattan, as well as a number of commissioned projects in Brooklyn.

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Stikman Never Gets BOARD; New Piece for Silent Auction

The Ever Clever Stikman does a little robotic dance to spring!

There is no end to the permutations that street art icon Stikman takes; a 3-D sculpture of sticks, screen printed on vinyl, doing a wiggly move on a page of notated music, and of course, smashed into the pavement for you to gaze upon while waiting for the “WALK” sign.

For the Street Art New York Silent Auction Benefit, Stikman has mutated and mounted a weathered piece of lumber, looking in context!

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BARRY McGee Video – Setting up at SFMOMA

One of the most influential artists to come out of the graffiti and street art scenes, Barry McGee, was recently asked to reinstall a work of his at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art for their 75th Anniversary retrospective.
Guess they really like this pimple-shaped protrusion of framed sketches, drawings, tags, photos, and geometric patterns

it’s the 4th installation of the piece at SFMOMA since 1996.

In the video, McGee talks about his first creative impulses and practices, “I drew a lot as a kid, but I didn’t know I was going to be an artist.”

Thanks to G. Lewis Heslet, of The Creative Lives, for alerting us to this video.  For more about the project go to http://thecreativelives.com/

Barry McGee Feature from TheCreativeLives

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Exclusive Pics of ROA’s Rooftop in Old Street, London

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In town for his smash solo show that opened this week at Pure Evil Gallery , street artist ROA flew to a nearby rooftop to install some sort of long-beaked bird. Thanks to eagle-eye photographer Sarah Didry, we can see the scene as it takes flight right now under sunny London skies.

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The next shots will be straight from the Pure Evil helicopter, which is currently in the English countryside taking Charley to a croquet game. Stay tuned!

images © Sarah Didry

>>>  < < > < > < > < > <<<  < <>>>>> <<< > > > > > > >> > < <

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Chris Stain Skateboard Piece for Auction

Street Artist Chris Stain always complains that he doesn’t get to skateboard anymore because he has grown-up duties and there is just no time. Boo hoo.

Maybe that’s why he designed this custom one-of-a-kind deck for the Street Art New York Silent Auction Benefit.  – At least he can be close to this symbol of teenager-hood while he’s painting.

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Two things I really dig about this is it includes A.) the ironic and personal statement across the bottom, “To Hell With Kevin”, which cracks me up, and B.) one of the tags on the water tower is by another artist in the very same auction.  Can you guess which one?

AND IN OTHER EXCITING CHRIS STAIN NEWS:

Congratulations to Chris for being featured in the prestigious photography magazine WINK, produced by impresario editor Charlie Fish who did a whole 8 page spread on some of his recent work, including a big mural he did in their offices. See the full online version of the magazine HERE.

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Stencil Top Five 04.12.10 from BSA

Stencil-Top-5

The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of StencilHistoryX

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A love stencil, anonymous (courtesy Stencil History X)

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Funk25 from Hambourg (© Urbanartcore)

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Indigo (Canada) “In Flight” (courtesy Stencil History X)

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Bruno Leyval “Le Duel”

(courtesy Stencil History X)

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Nazza (Argentina) “Carnaval” (courtesy Stencil History X)

See more at StencilHistoryX.com

See more Nazza images here

See more Indigo images here

See more Funk25 images here

See more Bruno Leyval here

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PANDEMIC GALLERY PRESENTS: J. COLEMAN “WANDERING STARS” SOLO SHOW

PANDEMIC GALLERY
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On Saturday, April 17th, Pandemic is proud to announce it’s first solo exhibition, “Wandering Stars”, featuring the work of DC based artist J. Coleman. Showing work both hung and painted directly onto the gallery walls, he creates a dialogue between both the figurative and spiritual realms. With a body of work already bursting forth with thought provoking images, he continues to embody the painterly as he transforms the walls of Pandemic into a virtual playground of deeply psychological intensity. We hope you can join us for this amazing event. Opening reception 7-11pm.

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Towards Enlightenment: J. Coleman’s “Wandering Stars”

by

Joseph G. Dreiss Ph.D.

Professor of Art History

University of Mary Washington

J. Coleman’s art is an art of spiritual struggle that emerges out of a deeply felt and intuitive engagement with a wide range of spiritual and philosophical traditions. Buddhism and Christianity are important sources, but so are Jungian and Freudian psychology and a host of eastern and western secular thinkers. The wide-ranging cultural sources from which Coleman’s art is drawn are filtered though a subjectivity focused on and passionately devoted to spiritual progress.  Coleman’s art is an autobiographical art of the psyche. It is an art born of suffering, emerging out of darkness, an art invested with perhaps equal measures of psychological power and metaphysical uncertainty, profound confidence and intense self doubt.

The title of this series of ten paintings, Wandering Stars, is indicative of the multivalent nature of Coleman’s artistic statement.  The title is drawn primarily from verse 13 of the General Epistle of Jude: “Raging Waves of the sea, foaming out their own shame: wandering stars, to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness forever.”   However, Coleman has also stated that the title connects to a quote from Frederich Nietzche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra in which Zarathustra, the prophet of the overman, states “I tell you: one must still have chaos in one, to give birth to a dancing star. I tell you: you have still chaos in you.” More directly, however, the title refers to panoply of characters that enact the drama and embody the conflicting energies of Coleman’s psyche.

East of the Garden (1) is the last painting that Coleman executed in the series of 10, and although in some ways atypical, it undeniably clarifies the existential plight of all the antiheros present in the other paintings. The main protagonist is a large-scale figure whose body is schematically indicated, but whose face, back lit with radiant white light, expresses a mood of implacability and merciless justice. This figure is a powerful and aggressively masculine reinvention of one of the Cherubim’s that God placed at the Gates of Eden to keep the fallen from entering paradise ever again. The fallen in the foreground, who recoils in response to the dominating angel, has a pose that was also intended to express the Buddhist idea that freedom arises at the moment when all things are rejected. So the fate of humans, as Coleman visualizes it, is that we are simultaneously condemned and free and that our freedom is only fully realized when we renounce the paradise denied us and accept our condemnation and our relegation to the realm of suffering outside of Eden.

The condemned figure, which is gray, monochromatic and heavily muscled, exemplifies Coleman’s current figurative style which might be seen as an freely adopted expressionistically conceived version of the traditional Ecorché or skinned figures used as study models during the Renaissance and later. However, the more likely stylistic source for Coleman’s figures are those of Leon Golub, a major inspiration for Coleman’s art as a whole and the Mexican muralists who he points to as important to the development of his style.

Thrown out of paradise and denied access to regain innocence, Coleman’s Wandering Stars respond to their plight at times with courage and strength and other times with uncertainty.

Kabzeel Warrior (2) is the most direct expression of Coleman’s antihero as power figure.

The figure represented is Benaiah, son of Jehoiada, a valiant warrior from Kabzeel who is written about in the book of Samuels. The imagery in Coleman’s painting refers to the time when Benaiah chased a lion down into a pit. Then, despite the snow and slippery ground, he caught the lion and killed it. Benaiah was also the commander of King David’s bodyguards and was known for deeds of courage and strength that included killing two of Moab’s mightiest warriors. But Coleman’s references to literary sources, Biblical are otherwise, are never literal in nature. His intention is never to illustrate narrative. Rather he borrows subjects freely, selected on the basis of how well they will serve as vehicles for his expressive intention which is primarily the externalization of self as it moves, oftentimes in tortuous ways, from darkness to light.

If Kabzeel Warrior represents Coleman’s antihero at his most stalwart and confident, A New Kind of Suffering (3) represents his antihero at his most metaphysically vulnerable. Suffering here is indecisiveness itself, uncertainty about which path to follow, which voice to listen to. The figure’s body, which is awkwardly twisting and turning, as well as its dual thought projections, both effectively communicate the suffering inherent in existential man’s condition of freedom. We are free to choose alternative courses of action but never free of the necessity to make choices or of the consequences, good and bad, of the choices that we do make.

Although Coleman’s main subject is the male human figure, he does opt to externalize psychic and archetypal energies using mythic animal images or images of reptilian and animal skulls. Chimera’s Revenge (4) is the most violent painting in the series as it shows a beast at the moment of the kill. In Greek mythology, the monstrous chimera, a snake-tailed lion, revenged its homeland, Lycia, until it was slain by Bellerophon.Coleman’s chimera, at the exact moment of the kill, experiences a form of violent enlightenment, realizing its power by the projection in its consciousness of an image of the archetypical king. The best know example of the subject matter in Western art is the Chimera of Arezzo, an Etruscan bronze, discovered in 1553 and currently in the collection of Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Florence, which is a direct source for Coleman’s beast.

Fear of Being Forgotten (5) is the most pared down of the images in the series, consisting of a dinosaur skull and a thought projection of a human skull frontally placed. The stark directness of the presentation of the images gives the work a minimalist aesthetic appeal not generally characteristic of Coleman’s art. However, the bared down presentation of the images is indicative of a general direction in which his art is moving which is toward a simple, clear, economic presentation of important content. While the subject is explicitly animal and human skulls, the painting expresses a personal concern on Coleman’s part. The situation of artists today, is a tentative one, continually threatened by anonymity and public indifference.

The other works in the series, Illusion of Control, Detached Thoughts on the Rearing Beast, Bare Knuckles to a Knife Fight, Their Words Were so Concrete and Complications of Awareness are each imagistically distinct and are demonstrative of the richness of Coleman’s imagination as he devises varied imagistic formulations to express a consistent underlying vision of the human condition.

“Wandering Stars” is a series of highly original paintings that manifest the creative evolution of an artistic sensibility deeply committed to the non-visible but crucial realms of psychological and spiritual experience.

You can view more work from the artist here:

http://www.colemanartwork.com
http://jcolemanartwork.blogspot.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcolemanartwork/


Pandemic Gallery
37 Broadway btwn Kent and Wythe
Brooklyn, NY 11211
www.pandemicgallery.com

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