Artists
NEO CONs at Frost Street Gallery
Aakash Nihalani, PosterBoy, and Ellis G.
form the new Crew called Neo Cons and are putting on their first show together.
From the Press Release:
“Work to Do” is on Schedule for March 26 at The Combine
Royce Bannon and the Endless Love Crew
have been working hard and probably playing a little too, and the group show they have engineered is a quick primer on what street art is looking like at the moment in Brooklyn, and elsewhere. The show inaugurates a hallowed creative space for artists in Soho and christens it with a new name, The Combine, at 112 Greene Street in Soho.
The theme of the show, “Work to Do” pays a tribute to words and works of the new president in this land, and Afrika Bambaataa has written a new song with the same name, which he’ll be performing when he reunites with the Soulsonic Force at the opening.
See more about the show and our interview with Royce here.
“We have to work like our future depends on it, because it does” – Barack Obama
Be a Deer, Won’t You?
For most of the 00’s the creatures of the natural world began appearing in our forward-looking art and music, like prophets,
and while it’s true that the streets are saying things, have the animals been saying things to us too? And if so, what are we hearing? Broken Crow always has animals in his work on the street, Dennis McNett too. Are they giving voice to the other inhabitants of the planet, inhabitants far removed from the urban jungle?
Anyway, what brought this to mind again was these two friends we met this weekend.
Nathan Pickett is Killing it in the Back Room
Breathe Like You Mean It
Nathan Lee Pickett is from Virginia, yet another incredible transplant to Brooklyn. I was already revved up and excited by the Morning Breath/Cycle show up front gallery at Ad Hoc that is running until March 22, but Mr. Pickett left me kind of stupified.
No pictures do it justice, so try to hit it this weekend – the paper cutting alone is so intense and detailed that to use it for a stencil almost seems beside the point – the pretty chaos that ensues from layering rich dense color, a calligraphic hand, and pulling the screen back from the wall so it’s shapes cast intricate shadows on the wall… Pickett’s new work is a revelation.
Logan Hicks + Broken Crow = “Broken Horse” at 498 Court Street
Renowned stencil artist Logan Hicks will be teaming up with the two-man painting team known as Broken Crow for the Broken Horse exhibit running May 1 – 3 at the former Hamilton Savings and Loan Bank in Brooklyn, NY (498 Court Street, Brooklyn, NY 11231).
‘THE BROKEN HORSE’
The Artwork of Broken Crow and Logan Hicks
BROKEN HORSE will run May 1st to May 3rd
Opening: Friday, May 1st 7-11pm
Hours: May 2-3 12pm to 6pm
Broken Crow, the two-man painting team, and Logan Hicks (Workhorse) are proud to announce the ‘The Broken Horse’ show. This 3-day event will mark the first offcial show in New York for all three of the internationally acclaimed artists. Taking the current economic state head on, the show will be hosted at the former Hamilton Savings and Loan Bank at 498 Court Street, Brooklyn, NY, in Carroll Gardens.
Although it appears to be simply a mix of the artists’ monikers (Broken Crow and Workhorse), the show’s title ‘The Broken Horse’ rejects the dualism of each artist’s work. Using this platform, the artists tackle the subject of living beings in their environment. Perhaps the Broken Horse is one whose spirit has been ‘broken’ – reared for servitude; maybe it refers to a busted horse, one that is damaged and no longer of use. This dualism leaves the title, and each artist’s respective work, open to interpretation: productive versus ruined, urban landscape or wildlife, ominous against auspicious.
Logan Hicks’ work often showcases the sprawling inhabitants of the city juxtapozed against the stark, grey environment in which they live. In many of his pieces, people wind through the streets, walk between cars, and pour out of buildings. It is as though the flow of people within the street mirrors the movement of water in a stream snaking around rocks, trees, and obstacles. The focal point of Logan’s work rests within the rhythmical pattern of crowds in the metropolitan environment.
By contrast, the central theme of Broken Crow’s artwork is the solo animal in nature. The work elevates the status of nature and showcases the importance of life outside the city. Often, the subject matter of Broken Crow’s pieces are animals menacingly staring down on the viewer. With murals larger in size than real life, these animals hover over the viewer in wait, observing and plotting.
BROKEN CROW
John Grider
John Grider is a stencil artist and muralist from Minneapolis, Minnesota.
In 2008, he painted walls in Paris, London, Duluth, Milwaukee, Minneapolis and Brooklyn, took part in exhibitions across Europe, was published in books from France and Greece, painted inside of a sky scraper, retired all of his stencils, and got deported from England.
As part of the two-man team known as Broken Crow, they have sought out to quadruple-handedly paint the largest stencils known to man- and womankind. They are rumored to hold the unoffcial record for cutting the world’s largest stencil.
Mike Fitzsimmons
Mike Fitzsimmons is a muralist/painter, and the platonic other half of the world-renowned duo known as Broken Crow.
He was classically trained in sculpture and painting at Illinois State University and has been cutting his own hair for a whopping fourteen years.
He cites his influences as everything from mid-nineties West Coast gangster rap, home remodeling and repair, music, cooking dinner with his wife, and long road trips.
He currently resides in St. Paul, Minnesota.
WORKHORSE
Logan Hicks
Logan Hicks is a stencil artist who has been stenciling his way around the world for the past 10 years. Known for his meticulious multi-layered stencils, his work captures the sensory overload with which a city can inundate a person.
With shows in nearly 30 countries and showing no signs of slowing down, Logan has brought his artwork to cities as far away as Cape Town, South Africa and Shanghai, China.
Logan is from Baltimore, Maryland, but currently lives in New York City. Citing New York as the ‘city of all cities’, Logan can often be found wandering the subway system at 4 in the morning taking pictures for his artwork or simply observing the army of people coursing through the tunnels like blood through a body’s veins and arteries.
Our interview last summer with Broken Crow can be seen here:
Fountain Art Fair Rocks the Boat
Brooklyn Galleries are in the House(boat) on the Hudson
From the moment you jog across the roaring West Side Highway and dodge the racing rollerblader lane
to step onto the lurching dock, the Fountain Art Fair let’s you know that it’s not going to be a typical ride. In it’s third year, the unofficial Anti-Armory floating fair on Pier 66 features independent and non-traditional and street artists and their works.
Ahoy, Matey!
9 galleries are participating this year, including a Glowlab fund-raising mini-gallery that’s helping street artist Swoon mount a new floating spectacular exhibit in the sea, this time it will navigate the Adriatic Sea from the Karst region of Slovenia to Venice, Italy in May of 2009. Artist Greg Haberny takes over the entire McCaig Welles booth with a cacophonic explosion of patriotic symbolism and corporate indictments in a decidedly not tongue-in-cheek installation called “The Donkey Party Game”. And AdHoc uses their wallspaces to spread the love of color, pattern, symbols and the police state with floor to ceiling installations done by Peripheral Media Projects (PMP).
Sure to entertain, the fair, mounted on a floating barge with an insecure-looking infrastructure, is by turns perplexing and powerful, frank and beguiling… just what you might expect from places that favor the art renegades.

Artists like Maya Hayuk, Royce Bannon, and infinity are part of the Swoon flotilla benefit. Raffle tickets are being sold to win a custom Swoon piece. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

The Donkey Party Game installation really rocks the houseboat. Artist Greg Haberny (photo Steven P. Harrington

Riot police, Crowns, Purple Heads... the unusual fair (Peripheral Media Projects) (photo Steven P. Harrington)
For more on Fountain take a look at NY1’s local news story
Participating Galleries
Ad Hoc Art – Brooklyn
Definition Gallery – Baltimore
Front Room – Brooklyn
Glowlab – New York
Leo Kesting – New York
McCaig-Welles – Brooklyn
Soundwalk – New York
Stuart Shepherd – New Zealand
Vagabond Gallery – New York
Jim Avignon at Factory Fresh “Anxiety Room” Closing
Jon Burgeron and Jim Avignon have been hopping around Brooklyn
Friday the 13th they will be reprising the fun-times of the opening with their “closing party”, even though the show will remain for a couple more days. Jim is planning to play some songs and Jon is planning to draw on your sweater if you don’t keep your eye on him.



Week In Images 03.01.09
Mighty Tanaka “As Is” Show in Clinton Hill
Mighty Tanaka is proud to present As Is, the artwork of JMR and In the Raw, a group show featuring Alexandra Pacula, Will Anderson and David Cook. This combined event seeks to bring communities together through a pop-up gallery located in the popular upcoming Clinton Hill area of Brooklyn. Through the usage of this alternative space to display fine art, these two art shows look to expand the interpretation of art in Brooklyn, mirroring the beauty of fine art with the seemingly raw environment of Brooklyn life.
As Is: The Artwork of JMR— JM Rizzi, or better known as JMR, has adapted a unique mixture of neo-abstract expressionism w hints of contemporary pop to create a style all is own. Having worked in both the street art world as well as the gallery world, JMR brings his iconic imagery to Clinton Hill . As he looks to demonstrate the scale and motion set forth by early abstract expressionists, he reinterprets the ideas within his own personal adaptation. Originally hailing from Brooklyn, New York, JMR has grown up with the influences of street art and the established art world constantly around him. Through his own individual, hybrid street style, he has dedicated himself to helping art fit into the public arena. Having participated in the highly successful 11 Spring St show in 2006, he has gone on to produce art for hotels and restaurants, as well as completing building sized murals in Manhattan. Having just completed the design for a line of clothes, which were featured at a recent fashion show during NYC’s fashion week, JMR looks to expand the idea and integrity of his art to the next level.
In the Raw: Alexandra Pacula, Will Anderson & David Cook—A group show consisting of three talented artists demonstrates an array of different mediums and approaches. Highlighting the unique artistic interpretation of each artist, In the Raw looks to offer insight into some of the exciting art currently being produced in Brooklyn. Alexandra Pacula has been showing art both regionally and internationally for the past six years. With a healthy resume consisting of both museum and gallery shows, she most recently won the Saatchi Gallery Showdown Competition in 2008, having her art displayed in the esteemed institution. Originally from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, Will Anderson began his artistic venture as a graphic designer. After moving to New York in 1997, he began pursuing photography. Currently working for Nylon Magazine, his award winning work has been published and exhibited both nationally and internationally. Born in Louisville, Kentucky, David Cook moved to NYC after being featured in New American Paintings. Working primarily on t-shirt and record design, he most recently received attention for his work in the Young Widows album Old Wounds.
Opening Saturday March 7th, 6-8pm. 105 Lexington Ave, Clinton Hill, Brooklyn.
Street Hush: Hymn to Beauty
US solo exhibition of work by UK artist HUSH Opens
Remember when your 3rd grade Art Class teacher excitedly told everybody that “today we are going to make Mother’s Day ashtrays”
out of molding clay and tempura paint …. and you managed to turn yours into a U.F.O. and also include pipe cleaners, feathers, and Amy Knickerbockers’ reading glasses into your design?
Mr. Hush understands you. He knows that there are just too many ways to let the creativity flow, and refuses to be pigeon-holed into one technique. Invite him to come play in your studio and he’s going to fly around the room employing whatever materials are available.
Starting Thursday at Carmichael Gallery Hush will be showing new chaotic cleverness that will include Acrylic Paint, Screen Print, Spray Paint, Ink, and Tea on Canvas and Wood as well as a site specific installation. That’s just the way he rolls. While simpleton’s are busy defending their chosen category of expression and expounding on it’s meaning and rightful place in the annals of the street, Hush says, “Let’s combine them all”.
Thankfully, he’s not just youthful energy on the loose. He has some serious chops behind his promises, and the resulting work very nearly vibrates off the wall.
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Hush took a few minutes away from the cans, stencils, paint brushes, and wheatpaste to talk to BSA about his inclusive approach:
Brooklyn Street Art: How long have you been an artist?
Hush: Well I’ve always been an artist in some form, or certainly always creative – it’s a lifestyle, I don’t think you choose art, its something you do, it is life. Well my life.
Brooklyn Street Art: Sometimes it appears that your work is riding the line between graffiti and street art; do you make a distinction between the two?
Hush: When I make my art I try and translate my interest in tagging, graf, decay, street art aesthetics into my work and juxtapose it with images of beauty, sensuality and the female form; allowing the later to be scene in a more positive way. The act of a tag or graf is no doubt beautiful in its own right but fusing the two together in an expressionist action creates something in its own right and puts questions out there.
Tagging, Graf, Street Art and art; each is always a choice, an action. It’s the context or location (in which appears) that changes its comment. I think it can work on so many levels.
Brooklyn Street Art: Similarly, elements of Eastern and Western culture dance together in your work…
Hush: Working and traveling through Asia had a huge impact on my life, my views and how I think and view life. I’ve always been interested in the way both the East and the West adopt each others’ cultures. The mix is almost fantastic.
Brooklyn Street Art: Do people ever make references to Faile when they talk about your stuff?
Hush: In the past Faile has been mentioned especially when people first saw my work. It was no surprise, but Faile are Faile, end of. Do I love they work? Yes. But I’m not going to stop something that comes naturally to me because another artist has played with similar imagery or aesthetics. I’m pretty sure we are probably turned on and inspired by the same things visually. As my work progresses I would hope people realize that my work exists in its’ own right.
Its probably because of Faile that my work has been noticed in the first place. That’s how art movements work anyway… look at any art movement through history. What Banksy and Faile have done for the street art movement is amazing. It helps generate a worldwide community through a general interest and love of art which isn’t stifled by the elitism of the general art world.
Brooklyn Street Art: What part does decay play in your process?
Hush: Decay is an important influence (direct from the street, its natural, beautiful) as are any of the D’s; Deconstruction, Decollage and so on. When I start a canvas I suppose my work is quite expressionist and free, I tag, graf, throw paint at it, whatever and generally just f**k it up, its about energy. I do everything to the piece till it feels right. The piece finds itself eventually and then the work begins it’s natural thing.
Brooklyn Street Art: Would you call it collage?
Hush: No, even though visually it can look like that and I do draw influence from the ideas of collage. I use complicated processes by overlaying different mediums – its really complex how the work’s put together. I utilize nearly every way of placing paint onto a medium as is possible through screen print, paint, spray paint, acrylic, oils, inks and then also taking that off – removing it again and building the image up from scratch so that you get a different appearance. Each process allows it to look different. It’s about mark-making ultimately.
Brooklyn Street Art: You probably have poured through many magazines and comics. Which one’s do you keep and treasure?
Hush: I know that people generally think I’m a manga head but the girls are used as a contemporary use of a female form/women in art, mangas more an inspiration rather than a interest. I used to collect graphic novels and comics in the early 90s I suppose I was precious and still have them in mint condition, especially anything by Simon Bisley.
Brooklyn Street Art: Thank you very much for your time!
Hush: Thanks for taking the time to do this also guys.
‘Hymn to Beauty’
A solo exhibition of new artwork by HUSH
Carmichael Gallery of Contemporary Art is proud to present Hymn to Beauty, the first US solo exhibition of work by UK artist HUSH. An opening reception will be held on Thursday, March 5th, 2009 from 7.00pm – 10.00pm, with the artist in attendance.
Deep Purple was cool, but this updated version is fun too:
On the Wall: Four Decades of Community Murals in NYC
a photographic exhibition in conjunction with the publication of…
Images of the African Diaspora
in New York CITY Community Murals
…On the Wall: Four Decades of Community Murals in NYC
presented by ARTMAKERS INC.
DATES: May 5 – 28
PLACE: African American Heritage Center
Macon Libary
361 Lewis Avenue (at Macon Street)
Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn
HOURS: 9-6, Mon, Wed, Fri
SUBWAYS: A, C to Utica Avenue
INFO: ArtmakersNYC@aol.com, 212.989.3006
Macon Library, 718.573.5606
COST: free!
FREE PUBLIC PROGRAMS
Opening reception: May 5, 6:30-8:30
Artmakers Inc. presents Images of the African Diaspora in New York City Community Murals, a traveling exhibition curated by Jane Weissman that explores how African and Caribbean art, history, religion and myth have influenced mural themes and content. The exhibition will be on view at the African American Heritage Center, Macon Library from May 5 -28.
The exhibition coincides with the publication of On the Wall: Four Decades of Community Murals in New York City by Janet Braun-Reinitz and Jane Weissman (University Press of Mississippi, 2/2009).
In the six years the authors researched On the Wall, Braun-Reinitz and Weissman discovered murals in Harlem from the early 1970s that were hitherto lost to history as well as murals painted since the late 1970s in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, that were unknown outside their immediate neighborhood.
Despite the disparity of time and geography, these murals are related in both theme and content, filled with images of the African Diaspora. The exhibition also looks at diasporan imagery – Caribbean as well as African – found in murals in other Manhattan and Brooklyn neighborhoods, Queens, and the Bronx.
The exhibition examines the traditional meaning of diasporan images and symbols and discusses them in terms of philosophy (i.e., the Black Arts Movement, Ghanaian artist Kofi Antubam) and their visual representations (e.g., Black Madonnas, Ethiopian illuminated manuscripts, Bògòlanfini and Adinkra fabrics, and Ndebele house painting).
Over the past 40 years, artists and arts organizations found contemporary meaning in these images and, through new research and interviews, the exhibition describes the relevance they have today. Decoded, the murals become more than striking images; they stand as visual representations of the cultural, social and political currents of the periods in which they were painted.
Weissman (who lives in Greenwich Village) and Braun-Reinitz (who lives in Clinton Hill) are longtime members of the Brooklyn-based Artmakers, an artist-run, politically oriented community mural organization that creates high quality public art relevant to the lives, work and concerns of people in their neighborhoods.
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ARTMAKERS INC.
Community Muralists
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