Shooting Gallery is pleased to present Australian artist Ben Frost’s solo show “See Inside Box for Details,” opening Saturday, September 8th, from 7-11 pm. The exhibition will feature approximately
The exhibition is free and will be open to the public for viewing through September 29th, 2012.
12 paintings on canvas as well as paintings on found
packaging, such as pharmaceutical boxes, candy and cereal packaging.
The controversial painter and street artist will be showcasing a unique body of work,
critiquing our media-obsessed society and our loss of innocence through advertising.
Ben’s work subverts logos, icons and characters from popular culture and re-presents
them in startling and often confronting new ways.
“See Inside Box for Details,” aims to re-evaluate our understanding of product
advertising by juxtaposing unlikely and confronting elements into some of our most
loved and well known consumer icons.
Ben Frost confronts the conjoined twins of
capitalism and consumerism with striking compositions that present a chaotic look at a seedy nature underlining pop culture, presenting sex and violence in a glamorous role. Most unnerving of all is that that on first glance the work of Ben Frost may seem innocuous, filled with the bright palette and playful characters of childhood cartoons and sugary cereals.
With a series of paintings placed on found pharmaceutical and food packaging, Frost highlights the disingenuous
optimism of advertising. The innocence of familiar cartoon forms overlain on stark boxes of prescriptions pills like Morphine and Botox opens a discourse on the proliferation of prescriptions in modern culture and the morally-ambiguous stake pharmacology has in society’s welfare.
From the Artist:
Whether it takes the form of medicine to keep sickness at bay or highly-
-processed treats to keep you content in front of the television, our pre-packaged
lifestyles are sold to us in colorful and dynamic boxes.
I’ve been using the logos and design elements of product packaging for many years,
and it seemed a natural evolution to begin painting directly onto the packaging – to
introduce
subversive elements within what already exists as an object.
Double entendre and satirical word play is brought out in new readings of our favorite
and well known products i.e. the breakfast cereal Special K features a drug dazed rabbit
introduced to the packaging, Viagra and Cialis boxes juxtaposed with Mr. Burns, Pop
Tarts featuring Britney Spears and Whitney Houston and a series of confronting
paintings onto McDonalds fries boxes.
Since I began painting onto packages in 2011,
the branding and product titles seem to be more obvious in their possible double
meanings. Twinkies, Hamburger Helper, Vanilla Cupcakes, Dirty Rice, Cheese Nips
and Hot Tamales have all suggested new and twisted re-imaginings.
I source the objects from different sources, either directly off the shelves of
supermarkets, friends who are in the medical industry, trash cans and from people who
actually use the various medicines that are inside the boxes.
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