Judith Supine: Unmasked Bridge Climber, Gender Bending and Art

Judith Supine: Unmasked Bridge Climber, Gender Bending and Art

Looks like Judith Supine is probably having a helluva week. He unmasked himself publicly for all, opened a new gallery show, climbed a NYC bridge over the East River to install a sculpture, and released a video of it that inadvertently sparked a mini media/bridge security frenzy.

Also, he created twin “hermaphrodites” with cigarette penises.

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Last week during a an open press interview at Mecka Gallery he only talked about the new “Golden Child” show and the fact that he had decided to stop hiding his face – which itself was sufficient news. Most fans of his art never had seen him and many thought Judith was an actual woman because he took his mom’s name as a prank. The stunt-loving Street Artist has always had a penchant for light trouble, whether it was dangling big freakish images off bridges, floating them down the river (reportedly nearly drowning himself), or simply smacking them up in doorways; these twisted fluorescent hallucinations he creates have more personalities than a Sunday talk show with LSD in the candy dish. And we’re not even mentioning his career-long examination of the he/she continuum that could inspire a syllabus in gender studies.

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One of Supine’s new ladies puffing away and staring blankly while nursing a cocktail above the traffic streaming on the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge into Manhattan. (photo © Steve Duncan/Undercity.org)

The video of him on the Ed Koch Queensboro bridge looks like it was coordinated to promote the show, and he has said as much in interviews since then, but now it probably seems ill-timed. He had done bridge art installations at least twice in the past (on the Manhattan Bridge in ’07 and the Williamsburg Bridge in ’09) but recent news items about thrill-seekers trespassing at the new World Trade Center put this video in a new light and caused concern about bridge security.

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A still from a live interview with Greg Kelley and Rosanna Scotto on Fox 5 “Good Day New York” (© Fox5)

The video brought sudden interest and even live televised interview time for the newly unmasked Supine as well as the news that police were reviewing the video and would probably like to interview him as well.

And yet for all his exotic subject matter and the media hubbub swirling around him right now, last week he was perplexed about how to supercharge his creative process  – the same mundane challenge to stay fresh that most artists have.

“Sometimes I get ‘art block’, or I feel like I start to make repetitive images. It’s frustrating. I try to break that by playing little tricks on myself by saying, ‘Alright I’m going to make like ten collages in an hour’ and they are all going to be shitty. But I’m forcing myself to work quickly, so I’m not over-thinking things and I’m trying to break through because its easy for me to get into a pattern,” he explained at Mecka where his new sculptures laid across benches and a couple of assistants helped to finished their construction.

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

For this show Supine began assembling collages 12 weeks earlier, and through a process of elimination he saw the few images that emerged above the others.

“I began by making 50 or more collages – going through multiple extremes, edits, trying to cut things and edit things down to the core goodness, get rid of the shit”

In kind of a stream of consciousness process, a pulling-together that attracts him?

“Yeah, it varies from day to day. When I do try to make a more narrative set image, I have difficulty doing that, and I feel like it comes off kind of stilted. So I try to keep it loose, and do lots, and then edit and try to find that little kind of gem amongst the crap.”

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

With more attention and friendly sorts around than before, who does he look to now that the proverbial road to stardom is getting crammed with yes-men? He points to his brother, a writer of prose with whom he has collaborated creative projects continuously since they were kids.

“I kind of like to make things with my brother as the audience, so I make things that I think he would enjoy. So I have one person that it is directed towards,” he explains as he recalls one of their childhood collaborations, a zine that he illustrated and his brother provided the text for.

“He would also draw and we would staple it all together. Like we kept it in a huge thing we called ‘The Picture Book’. It was almost like a series of them and for a few years we did that. He continued on with that and I think that’s when I started making collages, actually, around that time.”

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

“I would say that I wasn’t directly trying to illustrate. He wouldn’t want me to illustrate. It was more a feel for it. I was more inspired by our visual, written conversation that we had. It was like this ongoing thing where we would like bounce. It was this thing where I was kind of this creative obsessive, and I was living with another creative obsessive. And we were just constantly bouncing things off of each other and being comfortable saying ‘Oh, that looks like shit’.”

“Most people are not comfortable telling you that, even when they think it and they wait and tell someone else afterwards. So it was good to have a true honest critic and a true sounding board and we still do that with each other. When he writes or finishes a chapter he sends me a chapter. When I’m working on stuff I show it to him and ask his opinion and he’ll be like, “no it’s boring” or “that’s good”. I know when he says ‘it’s good’ that it is genuine, you know, sincere. Like creatively we have this sincere honest relationship with each other.

And what would be the best reaction to an artwork that he could get from his brother?

“I like that one”, “That one’s great”.

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A new piece with the collage that inspired it at Judith Supine’s “Golden Child” show. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Presumably Judith’s brother would approve of the pair of dual gender darlings hanging in the main gallery space, a white washed former industrial spot in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn. But the artist thought the average visitor might want to have a cocktail first.

Brooklyn Street Art: So when an individual walks into this space and sees this piece, what is their reaction going to be?
Judith Supine: Probably, “Where’s the bar”?

Brooklyn Street Art: Can you describe these twin greeters that are going to be hanging from the ceiling?
Judith Supine: Yeah they are kind of, you know I’m very interested in the kind of the hermaphrodite* thing, so these are kind of hermaphroditic – is that a word?

Brooklyn Street Art: Yeah that’s a word.
Judith Supine: So these are kind of hermaphrodites with these cigarette penises smoking vaginas with mouths. When you see the front image they form what I would consider a beautiful image and in the back is – a kind of Apollonian/Dionysian sort of thing. The back is a woman getting choked out. It’s sort of an optical illusion thing – like the one face with the two wine glasses inside. So when you walk around back it forms another image.

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Judith Supine. Outdoor, unrestricted installation. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Is it another aspect of that person’s character, the dual nature?
Judith Supine: I mean I know it’s a very well trod path to talk about the duality of man, or personalities. To me I think I would be bullshitting if I didn’t just say I thought it looked cool and it was interesting. It’s not like ‘the duality of man’ or some – there is like a grey area of trying to be honest and sincere and then… it’s not that when I work on these I don’t have these ‘deeper thoughts’ about art but saying them out loud kind of takes the power out of them, trying to articulate them just kind of sounds like bullshit.

So I try to just describe things at face value. But also maybe I have difficulty articulating, translating the thoughts in my head into words and I’m better at translating them into images.

Brooklyn Street Art: Maybe you are just concerned about sounding trivial.
Judith Supine: Maybe. It might be anxiety.

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Judith’s off-the-cuff show with a piece of ripped painting.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: What’s it feel like to be more public with your face?
Judith Supine: On the one hand I think it shouldn’t matter, because I do try to live my life according to the law of God and not the law of man – That type of thing. And I do what I feel is right. But I don’t know, it’s probably fucking stupid.

Brooklyn Street Art: It’s probably stupid?
Judith Supine: I mean it’s probably ill-advised, for obvious reasons. But who knows, I’ve done dumber things.

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Judith Supine models something for spring outside last week as he prepared for his show at Mecka, “Golden Child”. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Judith Supine

 

 

Judith Supine “Golden Child” is currently on view at Mecka Gallery in Brooklyn. Click HERE for further information.

 

*Editor’s Note: HuffPost and BSA acknowledge that the more appropriate term here would be intersex and intersex individuals.

 

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Jana & JS & Baby Makes Three, First Time Stenciling in New York

Jana & JS & Baby Makes Three, First Time Stenciling in New York

Street Art / Photography artist couple Jana & JS came to New York for the first time and hung around Brooklyn for the second half of March. Somehow you might say they brought a touch of romance to dirty BK streets.

Even with a baby in tow the duo could be seen taking turns with the ladder and the aerosol cans on one of the almost-spring sunny days we had last week. The two are from Austria and France and have a serious fan following in the Street Art scene because of the quality of their stencil work, and because they’ve managed to work their own images into their many pieces throughout Europe.

Now you can add Brooklyn to that list.

As we said in our Paris Street Art piece last November, this is a marriage made for the street.

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. A Family who paints together, stays together…(photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. Detail. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. Detail. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jana & JS for The Bushwick Collective. Detail. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

 

 

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Stunt Loving Supine Slithers Up Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge

Stunt Loving Supine Slithers Up Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge

Look who’s rolling up the East River; it’s Judith Supine completing yet another night time feat of foolhardy urban exploration with a bridge-based installation for one of the green skinned ladies s/he is known for on Brooklyn streets.

Probably seeking one of the last places in New York where you can still smoke a cigarette, we see one of Supine’s new ladies puffing away and staring blankly while nursing a cocktail above the traffic streaming across the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge into Manhattan.

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Judith Supine on the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge (photo © Steve Duncan/Undercity.org)

Already known for hanging a piece off the Manhattan Bridge in ’07 and on top of The Williamsburg Bridge in ’09, at this rate if he keeps heading in a northward direction we estimate the Street Artist should be on the new Tappan Zee when it opens in 2018.

Photographer Steve Duncan took these pics which appear to show the perch from Judith’s perspective, and we just saw a video of it on the website Arrested Motion that was posted Saturday, so there you go, the artist loves the river view.

We shouldn’t be surprised by his aquatic attraction since one of his child-women was previously seen wading below the pedestrian bridge in Central Park and he once styled his dear old dad in a ladies swimsuit and floated him off Grand Street Park in Williamsburg (see video below).

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Judith Supine on the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge (photo © Steve Duncan/Undercity.org)

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Judith Supine on the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge (photo © Steve Duncan/Undercity.org)

 

Judith Supine Goes Bathing in the East River

 

 

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Images Of The Week: 03.30.14

Images Of The Week: 03.30.14

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Here’s our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Adam Dare, Bunny M, COL Wallnuts, Don’t Fret, Icy & Sot, JMR, John Ahearn, Judith Supine, Michael McKeawn, Miss Me, Mr. Toll, Paper Skaters, Pyramid Oracle, and What is Adam.

Top Image >> Icy & Sot (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Judith Supine (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Col Wallnuts (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Adam Dare (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Jim McKenzie (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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What Is Adam (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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What Is Adam (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paper Skaters (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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JMR for The Bushwick Collective (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Pyramid Oracle (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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John Ahearn. Florant 2013. Plaster portrait of Florant Morellet, the colorful restaurant owner and business pioneer in the Meat Packing District of Manhattan installed at the High Line Park for the BUSTED Series. The portrait was inspired by the 16th century painting of Bacchus by Caravaggio. John Ahearn of course is a crucial link between public art and street art in New York and has been for thirty years or so, aligning his work and practice with actual people who live in our neighborhoods – especially in the Bronx. Mr. Florant, a longtime fixture and heart of the Meat Packing District, abandoned Manhattan for Bushwick, Brooklyn last year.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Michael McKeawn “Winter Laundry”. Look closely and you’ll see that this is an installation of rather large clothing. photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Miss Me produces a rather elaborate tribute to you know who. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Miss Me (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Dont Fret (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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bunny M (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Catch the Love (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Mr. Toll (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Untitled. East River, NYC. January 2014. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

 

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Please note: All content including images and text are © BrooklynStreetArt.com, unless otherwise noted. We like sharing BSA content for non-commercial purposes as long as you credit the photographer(s) and BSA, include a link to the original article URL and do not remove the photographer’s name from the .jpg file. Otherwise, please refrain from re-posting. Thanks!

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Judith Supine Lights Up at Mecka for “Golden Child”

Judith Supine Lights Up at Mecka for “Golden Child”

Cigarettes for all! That includes you kids! Come on, smoking is cool!

You can just imagine a critique by helicopter moms of this new work for Judith Supine’s “Golden Child” show somehow morphing into an anti-smoking crusade. The fascination s/he has with those slender white smokable sleeves is unabated – if anything cigs are proliferating throughout Judith’s fun house.

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Detail. Mecka Gallery, NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Truth is, you never know quite what to expect from the Street Artist who waves in and out of our consciousness, punctuating our pedestrian plod by popping up in doorways, hanging off bridges, and lurking in sewers with these blossom gilded child-model-smoking-sex-toy-puritan-slut-monsters who cavort and collide, limbs akimbo and entangled in acid greenwash.

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Detail. Mecka Gallery, NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Same goes for a Judith Supine gallery show for that matter; There are no pieces on sale tonight at Mecka, and the centerpiece installation is a suspended couple of double-sided hermaphroditic twins who ooze personality and whose luscious lips are smokin’.

While there are no artworks to buy, there will be a strange lottery-type print sale presented grab-bag style. According to the folks at Mecka, what is inside the long thin tube will be at least what is advertised, and in some cases, more than you bargained for. Need a light?

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Detail. Mecka Gallery, NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Detail. Mecka Gallery, NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Detail. Mecka Gallery, NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Mecka Gallery, NYC.  This is the print that will be available for sale and we are told that what’s is in the tube will vary. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Judith Supine “Golden Child” Detail. Mecka Gallery, NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

 

Judith Supine “Golden Child” opens today at Mecka Gallery in Brooklyn, NY. Click HERE for more details.

 

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Please note: All content including images and text are © BrooklynStreetArt.com, unless otherwise noted. We like sharing BSA content for non-commercial purposes as long as you credit the photographer(s) and BSA, include a link to the original article URL and do not remove the photographer’s name from the .jpg file. Otherwise, please refrain from re-posting. Thanks!

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BSA Film Friday 03.28.14

BSA Film Friday 03.28.14

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Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.

Now screening :

1. RONE. MADSTEEZ . MEGGS From Tost Films
2. Faith 47 “You Hold no Blame for my Proud Heart”.
3. Borondo “Looking For”
4. Papelero Lamolisha
5. This is a Generic Brand Video

BSA Special Feature: RONE . MADSTEEZ . MEGGS

RONE . MADSTEEZ . MEGGS From Tost Films

Faith 47 “You Hold no Blame for my Proud Heart”.

Cape Town, South Africa. 2014

 

Borondo “Looking For”

Megasingi in Luxembourg

 

Papelero . Lamolisha

This is a Generic Brand Video

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Inviting Neighbors to Paint Your Walls, Paweł Althamer at New Museum

Inviting Neighbors to Paint Your Walls, Paweł Althamer at New Museum

One of the electrifying aspects of Street Art for many people is the prospect that public space can actually be a place to create within. There is something about the hand-rendered painting or tag that stops people, fascinates them; these neighbors who otherwise are inured to the commercial images and messages that have all but taken over public space.

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

While the Bowery and Lower East Side neighborhoods were once a playground for experimental art and culture in general and they were once a test lab for graffiti, Street Art, and conceptual public art in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, one gets the feeling that hyper-gentrification has begun its final march toward complete eradication. Soon the visual signs of the counter culture that thrived here will exist only in coffee table books and on t-shirts.

Ah New York, ever rich with irony. The New Museum, an institution with roots in the downtown scene of those earlier days and which gives opportunity to under-recognized artists in their seven year old modern flagship, is now offering you a chance to deface their walls. Well, specific walls anyway, and there is an admission fee.

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Part of a multi-floor exhibition of work by Polish sculptor Paweł Althamer entitled “The Neighbors” the  space takes nearly the entire floor and is created specifically for you to paint, draw, scribble, scribe. At any given moment you may find a gangley group of students, grey haired hippies, chino clad money managers, or stilletto-stepping society mavens all planted on the floor or perched upon ladders pushing paint brushes glommed with brightly hued goo across a heavily layered mass of collective creativity.

Given permission to create, even the most reserved visitors are likely to furtively glance around for an instrument, and many do, gamely painting alongside their neighbors, or smacking up a fresh wheatpaste. We looked around for some recognizable graffiti or street art tags, but didn’t see one pop out – maybe indoor walls under bright fluorescent light like this aren’t the right unbridled environment they’re looking for. Maybe it was the ever-present seemingly serious guard at the door way.

The Bowery still has soup kitchens and homeless folks and stubborn remnants of a vibrant free-wheeling street art scene are still on display on certain blocks. And here in their midst, one of their newest neighbors has a new show called “The Neighbors”, and the free-wheeling spirit of creativity and discovery is alive inside it too. As ever, New York will decide which neighbors stay, and which ones go. Care to wager?

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” The New Museum, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

 

Paweł Althamer. “The Neighbors” at The New Museum in NYC is currently on view. Click HERE for details.

 

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Shok-1 Street Art X-Rays Reveal a Unique Hand at the Can

Shok-1 Street Art X-Rays Reveal a Unique Hand at the Can

Three decades since starting as an aerosol writer, Shok-1 may be more commonly referred to as a Street Artist today, even though graffiti is still in his bones.

After experimenting with a number of styles that lean more toward illustration and caricature, the England born fine artist has primarily focused on one unique style that sets him apart from others, which is harder to do in the ever-more-dense Street Art genre.

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Clavicles, metacarpals, femurs, tibiae, fibulae, patellae, mandible, scapulae, sternum, vertebrae, and coccyx; all of these and many fictional hybrids of them comprise the glowing X-ray compositions that distinguish Shok-1s work on walls around the world. The translucent quality is due to his meticulous technique with cans and caps, and a closely held method at that. The fluorescence and rainbow effects that transform his  earlier eerie monochrome paintings are probably due to his imagination, and his desire to experiment further.

Not often painting in New York, Shok-1 is shown here in Brooklyn last week as he demonstrated his new color technique on a large scale piece he calls “X-Rainbow (God was Nature)”.  He also experimented in black with a couple subjects of a more insectual nature. Without giving away any of his secrets, here you can see some of the technique that goes into his now signature style.

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shok-1 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Shok-1 completed these walls in coordination with and at the invitation of The Bushwick Collective.

 

 

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This article is also published on The Huffington Post

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New Video for Project M/3 at UN Site in Berlin

New Video for Project M/3 at UN Site in Berlin

Here’s a fresh video (below) completed yesterday that shows a little of the excitement and machinations behind the scenes of the Project M/3 in Berlin, as well as dramatic foreshadowing of the UN. Director Yasha Young lays some of the groundwork philosophy and Martha Cooper alludes cheerfully to the scope of things to come.  BSA-Brooklyn-Street-Art-M3-James-Bullough---JBAK-at-UN-March-2014-4

JBAK does an abstracted photorealistic piece for Project M/3 at UN, Berlin (screenshot © UN)

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Rone on the upper facade of the soon to be renovated future UN, Berlin (screenshot © UN)

An Urban Nation Growing in Berlin

For more on Urban Nation and ProjectM/3 click HERE and read BSA coverage with exclusive photos from Luna Park and an interview with Martyn Reed, curator of Project M/3.

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Skount and Pau Quintana Jornet Make a “Spring Offering”

Skount and Pau Quintana Jornet Make a “Spring Offering”

In Amsterdam the temperature is above freezing and the trees are beginning to show little buds on the branches. With any luck this new “spring offering” by Skount and Pau Quintana Jornet will usher in the end of winter faster.

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Pau Quintana Jornet and Skount collaboration in Amsterdam. “Spring Offering” (photo © Skount)

Inspired by Norse mythology, their mural is a modern interpretation of the goddess named Freya, who, not surprisingly, rules over matters regarding fertility and love, and also provides for those killed in war. With a nod to Norse sorcery, war, and death, there also represented is a holy tree named Yggdrasil that reaches far into the soil and far into the heavens.

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Pau Quintana Jornet and Skount collaboration in Amsterdam. “Spring Offering”. Detail. (photo © Skount)

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Pau Quintana Jornet and Skount collaboration in Amsterdam. “Spring Offering”. Detail. (photo © Skount)

 

Pau Quintana Jornet’s long term initiative called Project Wallflowers HERE.

 

 

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Images Of The Week: 03.23.14

Images Of The Week: 03.23.14

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Here’s our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Aine, APC, Bast, Billi Kid, Dain, David Shillinglaw, Dee Dee, Dennis McNett, Droid, Enzo & Nio, Kaws, Li-Hill, Seazk, Stikman, and Wing.

Top Image >> Dain is back with some new objects of his affection (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Dain (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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The city is full of them, but you usually don’t catch one like this. Li-Hill (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Wing (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Droid (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Enzo & Nio (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Gurl, oh no you didn’t! Bast (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Kaws in collaboration with the Brooklyn Academy of Music (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Dennis McNett in collaboration with Show Paper (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Aine. Often when we talk about art in the streets we refer to it as the gallery on the street, and in this case it literally is one. This artist contributed this collection of his own works and studies of a couple of others, installed on the street.  The collection has changed over time and most people just appreciate it and move on. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Aine. Next to his own character illustration, a study of the Mary Cassatt’s 1893 oil painting The Childs Bath is in the collection.(photo © Jaime Rojo)

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APC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Dee Dee (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Seazk (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Billi Kid (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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David Shillinglaw (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Stikman (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Untitled. Shadow of a man checking his mobile phone. Brooklyn. March 2014 (photo © Jaime Rojo)

 

 

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Spaik and Libre Collabo Mural in Mexico City

Spaik and Libre Collabo Mural in Mexico City

A collaboration between two Gen Y Mexican muralists went up this month for college age festival goers at an electronic dance event in Mexico City that features multiple DJs, carnival rides, laser light shows, and neon accessories. Here are some shots of the massive wall by Spaik and Libre and you can see the video at the end for more information.

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Click on this full length image above to see larger.

Spaik and Libre collaboration in Mexico City (photo © Jose Hernandez)

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Spaik and Libre collaboration in Mexico City. Detail. (photo © Jose Hernandez)

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Spaik and Libre collaboration in Mexico City. Detail. (photo © Jose Hernandez)

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Spaik and Libre collaboration in Mexico City. Detail. (photo © Jose Hernandez)

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Spaik and Libre collaboration in Mexico City. Detail. (photo © Jose Hernandez)

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Spaik and Libre collaboration in Mexico City. Detail. (photo © Jose Hernandez)

 

 

 

 

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Please note: All content including images and text are © BrooklynStreetArt.com, unless otherwise noted. We like sharing BSA content for non-commercial purposes as long as you credit the photographer(s) and BSA, include a link to the original article URL and do not remove the photographer’s name from the .jpg file. Otherwise, please refrain from re-posting. Thanks!
 
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