“My personal art, that’s my vehicle. When people look at a show they’re almost kinda seeing my diary of my frustrations.”
This interview on Walrus TV shows Pastras giving great frank modern-life insights, including some on-point searing observations on the toxic legacy of racism we are all swimming in.
“I question the word “race” and the term “race” because it’s obviously been used against everybody at this point.”
About Chris Pastras:
Stereo, founded in 1992 by Chris Pastas’ and Jason Lee, approaches skateboarding with a unique and highly innovative emphasis on style, originality and plain old fashion fun. By incorporating street art, 50s and 60s design, jazz album cover artwork and ideas pulled from early men’s magazines, Stereo has been credited as revolutionizing skateboard graphics, artwork and advertising. The classic Americana styles Stereo produces carries with it a lightness and humor that promotes individuality and creativity amongst skateboarders of all ages. http://www.stereosoundagency.com/ http://www.thelovestation.com/
Images of the Week 02.21.10 Our Weekly Interview with the Street
WK Interact has been very busy on this spot in Manhattan – a wild untamed tableau that borrows from fantasy and nature. Looks like Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat. The obstructed view below it is an existing WK piece from a little while ago. (photo @ Jaime Rojo)
Comics and comic books have had a great influence on the artistic development of many graffiti and street artists and right now there is a cool show going on in Manhattan that explores some of the dopest.
Known for his devious and comical monsters in his own work, New York street artist Royce Bannon explores the monstrous paucity of African American Superheroes in comics in a new interview with a curator in Source Mag.
from the inteview by Royce Bannon;
Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez, curator of the Marvelous Color show, talks about the process of bringing the African-American super hero to the masses in NYC.
When did the idea to exhibit Marvels Black super heroes happen?
Somos Arte had the privilege of producing the first solo art show for Marvel’s Editor in Chief, Joe Quesada (www.santerians.com). After the success of his exhibit, we took some time to develop our next show. We wanted to do a new show that gave us the opportunity to highlight the many amazing renditions of these six African/African-American superheroes that are so culturally impactful to audiences regardless of race. They are multidimensional characters who have been developed and portrayed over 40 years. Marvelous Color allowed us curate an exhibition that displayed how different artists rendered and interpreted these characters over the decades. See more images and read more at THE SOURCE
The show, runs through February 26 at African Diaspora Institute on 58th Streetcalled The MarvelousColor,featuring 27 artists, among whom are The Black Panther, Storm, Luke Cage, The Falcon, Blade and War Machine.
Marvelous Color At the Gallery of the
Caribbean Cultural Center
African Diaspora Institute
408 West 58th Street (between 9th and 10th Avenues)
Closing: February 26, 2010
Monday – Friday, 10am – 6pm CLOSED ON WEEKENDS
Suggested Donation: $5
Art Collective Dispatchwork travels the world with a color small scale constructive approach to Street Art.
Patching a Berlin Wall (Dispatchwork)
Color Morter from Dispatchwork
Kids, don’t throw away those old Legos! Yes, you’ve moved on to Maxus Dragonoid and Twilight action figures but you could also help Mom and Dad with some house repairs if you think about it….
Dispatchwork is a travelling project that has so far been in Bocchiganano, Tel Aviv, Berlin, Amsterdam, Belgrade, Arnsber, St. Petersberg, Zurich, and Quito. Learn more by clicking on the logo above.
The neighborhood of Park Slope in Brooklyn is better known for beautiful Brownstones, impossible parking, towering maples, social liberals and baby strollers than graffiti or street art.There is one commercial strip down the upper middle of this town-y enclave,with delis and bagel shops and The New York Times on Sunday –and aside from the occasional mural or stickered paper-box, not a whole lot of Street Art action.
On a recent sunny Saturday on 5th ave and Union Street, you may have seen a window display that made you think of street art. In fact, you can see it from the street, and local artist Ryan Seslow is a huge fan of the New York Street Art scene.
Park Slope window installation by artist Ryan Seslow as a satelite to “Programmed”
Brooklyn Street Art: Tell us about yourself.
Ryan Seslow: My name is Ryan Seslow. I’m a multidisciplinary artist living and working in New York. I am also a professor of fine arts teaching studio courses between 4 colleges here in NY and I’m always involved in several different projects at once, it seems, either as an artist, curator, or both.
I feel like I’m 3 or 4 different kinds of artists all trapped into one body. I have more energy than I usually know what to do with, so I love to exercise that on artistic potential and experimentation. Making art from a very young age, my real love for art came from the inspiration I found in 1980’s graffiti, public art, and cartoons. Martha Cooper’s “Subway Art” was, and still is, one of my all-time favorite books.
I was a teenager when the b-boy movement got a hold of me. My entire family is from various parts of Brooklyn, so weekends and summers were spent combing the streets looking for inspiration, while trying to mimic the works I saw.
The original “Subway Art” book by Martha Cooper and Henry Chalfant
Brooklyn Street Art: Can you talk about “Programmed” and what it’s about?
Ryan Seslow: I was recruited to do a satellite installation for “Programmed“, a show about rethinking the relationship with these electronic objects in our lives that we no longer use. The concept of the show was to synthesize the use of obsolete electronics into your work. It touches areas of recycling and the ephemeral existence of many things in today’s world.
I had already been doing this in another commercial window space for a few years, so the fit was nice and exciting. The owner also had this great public window space that he wanted to use to showcase my installation-based works, rather than just filling the space with redundant advertising so we collaborated ideas on the use of the space.
In both projects I wanted to inspire and reach the general public of Park Slope with colorful installations that would show a variety of traditional art techniques as well as more non-traditional works. The context of the commercial window space was perfect to contradict what is essentially public work.
Artist Ryan McIntosh’s piece from the “Programmed” exhibit, made from hard drives, is called “Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall” (image courtesy www.cultofmac.com)
Brooklyn Street Art: Can you talk about some of the materials you used and their significance.
Ryan Seslow: The materials are intuitive manifestations and representations of what can be used to make ART. I’m all about the allowance of communication and self-expression. The curators did ask me to emphasize the use of obsolete electronics. The Mac Support Store (the installation site) is also a hub for the recycling of used computer parts.
The store had this enormous mountain of stuff to choose from and I was drawn to the keyboards right away because keyboards are objects of serious potential; amazing tools and an intermediary means of infinite communication. Each keyboard has the potential of writing the next great literary novel or the next great resolution to help the world. The keyboards connect both the familiar and unfamiliar imagery in the installation, maybe helping the viewers create narratives between the pop icons and the technology.
“I love making art. I’m pretty much obsessed with the process of generating things. I love learning new skills, not so much to isolate the skill itself, but more to integrate it into what I am already doing. I like to test the potentials of things,” Ryan Seslow.
Brooklyn Street Art: How long did it take you to prepare for this, and do the installation?
Ryan Seslow: This installation was built in less than two hours – It is an art practice in itself.
My installations are all intuitive and immediate. I have been working pretty large for about 10 years now so the energy that goes with setting up an installation is always thrilling and I like the challenge of working with the space. Each piece is created individually, so they must hold up that way first, but the installations are 100% modular. Every piece must ultimately fit and work together as a whole by means of form, color and content.
Brooklyn Street Art: Do you think of this as street art?
Ryan Seslow: I do think of this installation as street art. I have been a lover and a participant in the medium of street art for a long time. I may be a lot more careful about when and where I put my work up than I was 10 years ago; that knowledge comes from past experiences. Art forms should be embraced as ongoing expanding things, by seeing the potential of why and how they can fit the foundation of where they began. This exercise itself forms ideas and allows for expansion.
The work is right on the street, the viewers are those walking by on the side walk, or driving by in their cars. It has been framed in glass and protected to a degree. I find this interesting as well. I anticipate more museums and galleries doing this in the future as the context of public art develops and artists continue to push its limits.
Brooklyn Street Art: Do you have any favorite Street Artists whose work you follow?
Ryan Seslow: I love and follow several street artists on a daily basis. I’m a big fan of the BSA site as well as the Wooster Collective. Some of my favorite artists are John Fekner, Michael DeFeo, Gaia , Jeff Soto, Abe Lincoln Jr., Miss Van, Faile, Bast, Robert Williams, Lady Pink , Fafi, Gary Baseman, Tim Biscup, Barry McGee, Swoon, and so many more, too many to name!
Ryan used computer pieces, paper, film, and this image of Jackie Kennedy on the screen of a monitor for the installation.
Brooklyn Street Art: How does Jackie Kennedy figure into the piece?
Ryan Seslow: Funny, Jackie O and JFK have always left this long-lasting impression on me. When the John F. Kennedy assassination was brought up to me in the 5th or 6th grade, in a history class, it never left me. I recall being really freaked out by the way I was interpreting the whole event. As time went on, by the time we got into high school, we were shown the actual assassination film itself (you know the one). At least once a year, I seek to find old and grainy images of the couple. I think they represent some form of the ephemeral with in me. They remind me that our stay here on this planet is not forever, it activates this crazy gratitude to and for all things.
60 second silent collage of the Kennedys.
Brooklyn Street Art: Do you ever hang out and spy on people who have stopped to look at your installation?
Ryan Seslow: Nah, not too much spying, but I do get people who approach me and ask some interesting questions from time to time. Kids seem to be big fans on a regular basis! I have gotten several independent commissions this way, just by creating live art that invites the public to participate by simply talking to me. I am always left with a memory of the experience.
Brooklyn Street Art: You’ve done drawing, painting, stenciling, collage, even sculpture – is there something you haven’t tried but would like to?
Ryan Seslow: That is a great question. I love making art. I’m pretty much obsessed with the process of generating things. I love learning new skills, not so much to isolate the skill itself, but more to integrate it into what I am already doing. I like to test the potentials of things. I would love to do more with the synthesis of street art, public sculpture, experimental film and collaborations.
Actually, this is what I mean; I want to collaborate more with other artists. There is so much to learn when you work with other people, which is one of the main reasons I became an art professor.
Detail from the installation by Ryan Seslow
Brooklyn Street Art: What’s the next project you’ll be working on?
Ryan Seslow: Got several things going on right now. I’m teaching 8 courses this semester, so teaching is a bit more demanding than usual. I’m also curating a special video art/experimental documentary program for The Streaming Festival in the Netherlands , working on an installation series for public art in Jericho Plaza in Long Island, a group video art stills project in Denmark, participating in MagMart in Naples, and I’m part of a top secret underground stencil project.
All images of Ryan Seslow’s work courtesy the artist.
“Programmed”: a group installation art exhibition, is curated by Michele Jaslow & Spring Hofeldt. Park Slope, Brooklyn. The show is open until March 13, 2010.
The Mac Support Store is located at 168 7th Street in Brooklyn. The store is open Monday thru Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The store is closed on Sundays.
DFN Gallery is proud to exhibitNew Night Paintings, a solo exhibition of recent paintings by Dan Witz. A continuation of his luminous nightscapes theme, Witz transforms banal subjects – lamps in apartment buildings and liquor bottles displayed in upscale bars, into glowing domestic shrines. These paintings transcend mere depiction, emitting (a private/public) light that reveals concurrent feelings of intimacy and isolation.
Witz creates his pieces using a distinctive process; first by printing a digital photograph onto a canvas as an underpainting and then adding layers of oil paint and transparent glazes, using the techniques of the 17th century European masters. The source photos for the Park Avenue Lobby Lamp series were all taken of building lobbies on the Upper East Side near DFN Gallery. Context here becomes subtext. As seen in Park Avenue Lobby Lamps with Poinsettia, Witz’s tableaus are transformed into shrines by their own self-contained auras. Stage sets posing as intimate domestic interiors allow us to suspend disbelief long enough to enter the world of the painting. The obvious artifice of these interiors and the alluring chiaroscuro play of opposites between light and dark call to mind not only the dualities of our everyday lives vs. packaged realities, but serve the artist as “a sustaining metaphor for what it is to make paintings”.
Dan Witz, Bar Shrine II (triptych) 2009, oil and mixed media on canvas, 56 x 78 in.
“There’s a revealing tension there – a subliminal signal of something significant, some clue to understanding our modern lives as outcasts, searching for light, and warmth, and meaning. As a kid I always sneaked over to look in the drawers of the lobby desks, hoping for some kind of sign or surprise. ” –Dan Witz
Dan Witz was born in Chicago in 1957. He studied at Rhode Island School of Design and Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture before graduating from Cooper Union School of Art in New York in 1980. He has had several international exhibitions and has been a grant recipient from the National Endowment for the Arts and from the New York Foundation for the Arts. Witz’s work has been featured in publications such asTime, New YorkandJuxtapoz. In January 2009, a monograph titled, “Dan Witz. In Plain View. 30 Years of Artworks, Illegal and Otherwise,” will be published by Gingko Press. Dan Witz is also a well known street artist, balancing his time between making paintings in his studio in Brooklyn. This is Dan Witz’s fifth solo exhibition at DFN Gallery.
DFN Gallery is now located at 74 East 79th Street (between Park & Madison Avenues)
Gallery Hours are Tuesday through Saturday 11 AM to 7 PM.
For further information please call 212-334-3400 or visit us atwww.dfngallery.com
Brooklyn is changing… again. Some call it a renaissance. Others are too busy with the rent hikes to call it anything. We’re in the thick of it here at Eastern District so we deemed it “necessary” to address such pressing issues with a “critical” art show. Ladies & Gents Eastern District Gallery presents: “East Williamsburg”, because defining reality is sometimes harder than choosing a color for your fixie. The show is being produced by the E.D. Clan: CA$H 4, Juan Doe, Jim Kiernan, Lucas McGowen, NohJColey, and Poster Boy BANK$Y, yes the Poster Boy BANK$Y. Show opens Friday, March 12 at 7pm. There will be free drinks and a live Dj, but no parking. Sorry, a parking garage has yet to grace our lovely community, so you might have to take the L train to the Morgan stop in Brooklyn. 43 Bogart St.
A BENEFIT ART AUCTION TO HELP THE PEOPLE OF HAITI…
MONEY RAISED GOES DIRECTLY TO DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS AND THEIR CURRENT MISSION IN HAITI!
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17th, 2010
ENVOY Enterprises (131 Chrystie St. – New York City)
6pm – 10pm
* Featuring works by:
Zoe Crosher
Miya Ando
Jordan Eagles
Cordy Ryman
Erika Ranee
Jeffrey Hargrave
Michael De Feo (and Marianna!)
Gabriel J. Shuldiner (and Fiona!)
Dorin Levy
Andrzej Zielinski
Matthew Deleget
Rossana Martinez
Miriam Cabessa
Robert Goolrick
An Hoang
Karlos Carcamo
Hermes Payhruber
Keren Moscovitch
Seyhan Musaoglu
Antoine Lefebvre
Kyoung eun Kang
Nicky Enright
Shani Peters
Brian Petro
Elia Bettaglio
Cecile Chong
Casey J. Diskin
Morgan Ersery
Christine Gedeon
Lea Bertucci
Suzanne Kathaleen Stroebe
Marina Zamalin
Danielle Goldsmith
George Towne
Vincent Como
Yen-Ting Chung
Genevieve White
Christopher Stout
Jess Ramsay
Mary Younkin
Josh Bricker
Joseph Ayala
Leah Dixon
Paul Vlachos
Loretta Lomanto
Tomoe Tsutsumi
Karen Dolmanish
Michael Gaffney
Bianca Franco
David Mann
Heide Fasnacht
Davina Hsu
Jae Kyung Kim
Chandrika Shrobe
Aya Rodriguez-Izumi
Jasmin Geyer-Gershony
Avi Levy
Amy Finkebeiner
Yevgeniy Rybakov
Ivo Bonacorsi
Rochelle Rubinstein
Fiona Conrad
Holly Overton
Samuel Vider
Jacqui McLoughlin
Chris Mezte
Joan Matalon
David Boim
Ryan Turley
Nicole Bezerril
Rodolfo Moraga
Emanuele Sferruzza Moszkowicz
Bridget O’Rourke
Eleanor White
Steve Page
Linda Griggs
Logan T. Sibrel
Yes, I do worry. Especially when it is snowing like crazy and my bike wheels are about to slide across one of those large metal slabs the City puts across gaping construction holes.Those huge hell platters are slicker than snot on a doornob and liable to deposit me directly under a delivery truck.
Don’t Worry, One Day Things Will Get Better; Happiness is a Warm Gun. (TrustoCorp)
For those of you who would understandably get up-in-arms about these very realistic signs – placement is key.
If I thought these would actually cause accidents I would not think it was funny anymore, but these were in an obviously not correct location. But hey TrustoCorp! Like the drag queens say, “two points for ‘realness’, honey”.
Here’s that Beatles song I was referencing above- and a rather clever black and white Dada-esque video to accompany it. People used to say this song was written about smack, so the video style strikes a vein.
Facing the Public Can Be a Huge Challenge for a Street Artist. Fauxreel has no problem looking you in the eye (and heart).
Street Artist Fauxreel shows BSA some of the images he uses to create his new “Face in the City” series.
The finished Fauxreel on the street.
Dan Bergeron, AKA Fauxreel, has been bringing realistic-looking people to the street for about a decade. Using photography, sociology, and psychology, the Toronto-based artist likes to pay homage, increase visibility, and give voice to people we may not usually see or hear. Time and again he returns to issues of social justice and the individuals who he sees have been overlooked or outright ignored by our greater society on some level.
Fauxreel’s work is deliberate, thoughtful, careful and heartfelt. A great amount of study and preparation takes place before any piece is finally up, as if doing less would be dishonest. His newest project is a departure from these heavier sentiments and takes a step back from social policy. Instead his portraits seek to fuse with the walls, camoflauge themselves with graffiti and weathered brick. In these partially missing portraits, the topic of invisibility is addressed yet again, but this time with more poetry and a bit of mystery.
As usual, Fauxreel is putting his best face forward, and following it up with action. Here he talks with BSA about three of his most recent projects and what motivates him to hold a mirror up before us.
Fauxreel selected people who lived in this public housing project and created huge portraits for the buildings in the complex. (photo Dan Bergeron)
Brooklyn Street Art: When we last spoke with you, you were working on a large project in a public housing area in Toronto (The Regent Park Portrait Project). Was that a good experience for you and the residents?
Fauxreel: It’s hard to speak for all of the residents of the Regent Park community, but the ones that I did keep in touch with were very happy to either have participated as subjects or to have a positive spotlight shone on their community. Did the project help residents in terms of being displaced from their community? No. Although no concrete outcome emerged from installing the images, I think that a lot of Torontonians got out to visit Regent Park when they normally wouldn’t have and with the help of Luminato (the festival that commissioned the project) there will be a new arts center built when the redevelopment is completed.
Fauxreels’ portrait of Valda.
Personally, the project was rewarding for a number of reasons. The scale of the work was a challenge to create and install. I had gone 10′ high before, but doubling the size made me tighten up both my shooting and pasting skills.
The impact the work had (and still has as I still get e-mails from people who have just discovered it) made me realize that my work can have merit, can exist for the greater good and not just in an anti-establishment sort of way. But most importantly the project was rewarding and memorable for the people that I met and the process involved in its undertaking.
Fauxreel worked with people who are homeless in Toronto to bring their humanity to the street.
Brooklyn Street Art: Recently you have been working on a project called “The Unaddressed”. Similar to the other project, it contemplates people who are marginalized by our society.
Fauxreel: The Unaddressed project came about through a commission I received from The Royal Ontario Museum and The Contact Photography Festival. The exhibition was entitled Housepaint Phase II: Shelter. Devon Ostrom curated the exhibition and The ROM chose to work with 5 artists – Evoke, Other, Elicser, Specter and myself. The other four artists chose to work with interpreting structures in accordance with the theme of homelessness. As such, I thought I would work to my strength and focus on people. Over four months I spent time meeting various homeless and formerly homeless residents of Toronto.
Brooklyn Street Art: This time out, you gave people placards with messages – a bit more direct way of getting the idea across?
Fauxreel: In completing research for this project, I read a book called Dying For A Home by Cathy Crowe, who’s a street nurse living and working in Toronto. Through reading the book I got the impression that to combat an issue like homelessness you have to be very much in other people’s faces.
Simple placement and simple message sometimes is the strongest. Fauxreel’s “The Unaddressed”
Never insult people or chastise them for their fortune in life, but definitely talk about the homeless situation as directly as possible. Be frank and be honest. As such, I thought that using panhandling signage for the subjects to convey their messages was as simple and straightforward as you can get. So I brought the subjects over to my studio, we chatted about their experiences and they came up with messages that they wanted to convey to the public; messages that were counter to what is usually seen on most panhandling signage today.
In the end, the signs revealed some of the issues surrounding homelessness, showed the public that some necessities that we take for granted (think about having a phone or identification) are actually quite valuable and hard to come by and they allowed the subjects to speak their minds.
Brooklyn Street Art: Why do you think we walk right by people in need without seeing them?
Fauxreel: Unfortunately we ignore many things, people and situations in life as a pure means of survival. I’m definitely guilty of it. Imagine if you were to walk to work everyday and stop and chat, give money or help everyone that needed it. You wouldn’t get to work on time, you would feel pretty depressed and you would have a little less money in your pocket. And because reasons for being homeless are so complex – drug addictions, mental illness to name a few – it’s often hard for the average person to reach out to someone in a situation like this. That being said, we shouldn’t ignore others in need in order for our own perseverance, but we should try and find a balance between giving of our time or money to individuals and organizations that need are help and working towards our passions and goals. I think someone once said that it’s easier to give of yourself when your cup is full.
“Everybody Deserves Respect”, by Fauxreel
Brooklyn Street Art: Can you talk about one of the individuals you worked with, and how the process evolved?
Fauxreel: I met a lot of the subjects through Andy Coats, a family friend who works with Project 417 here in Toronto. Project 417 is responsible for sandwich runs, providing clothing and specifically working with homeless youth, amongst many other efforts. Andy was able to introduce me to a number of homeless youth through a weekly meal drop in at Knox Presbyterian Church. With Andy as a liaison, I was able to meet a bunch of great folks and help them get their messages out.
“Don’t You Dare Deny My Existence” A portrait of Ron Craven by Fauxreel
Of the 18 people who’s photograph that I took, I think spending time with Ron Craven was the most illuminating. Ron is a former successful real estate agent who became a hard drug user in the early 80’s, lost it all and ended up on the street. The interesting thing about talking to Ron is that he’s lived all of these different lives and he understands the value of money and property in ways that most people don’t, whether they are homeless or not. Although many people liken real estate agents to the devil, it’s people like Ron who get to see the joy that people feel when they purchase a home. So to hear Ron talk about life on the streets is a definite eye opener.
Integrating the exposed and weathered brick wall as an element of the face in the city, Fauxreel loosens the grip for a ghostly effect. The new works “explore the idea that beauty truly lies in the scars, wrinkles and blemishes of places we live and people we meet”
Brooklyn Street Art: Today you are working on some pieces that are bit more abstract…almost like the head of an invisible man…
Fauxreel: “The Unaddressed” project took a lot out of me and I really didn’t want to create work outdoors for a while. The reaction to the work in Toronto was not very favorable. A lot of the pieces got ripped down and/or defaced with rude comments directed at the subjects. Although looking back, it shows that the work resonated enough with the public that they reacted to it.
With this new body of work (“Face of the City”) I’m trying to take on some ideas that I’ve come to develop through spending time with Specter. As you may know, he and I worked on “A City Renewal Project” last year and we are really great friends.
Fauxreel’s original photo of the model for his new series, “Face in the City”
Whenever we talk about new work the discussion always comes back to the work being site-specific. With these new pieces I want to take the attributes of the distressed walls and let them become part of the expressions in the faces of the subjects. It makes the work somewhat three-dimensional in a way and is allowing me to loosen my style and approach up a bit.
The resulting street art image by Fauxreel.
The work is in it’s infant stages at the moment, but I think that the ideas behind the work have a universal appeal, will allow me to experiment with a bunch of different techniques and approaches, and it’s a body of work that I think I could continue to work on here and there for years to come.
Brooklyn Street Art: How do you try to create work that can speak to viewers?
Fauxreel: To speak to viewers I think you need to be sensitive to them and their interests. If you’re working outdoors, then you need to look at issues of public space, look at how people communicate with one another, realize how the work can help people to understand others and themselves and always be keen to pay attention to where the work is going to reside. Other than that I would only say that you should try and be original and create work that has some substance. Without substance there is no purpose or longevity.
Joe in Black and White by Fauxreel.
Brooklyn Street Art: You’ve talked in the past of a communal living room. Is that how you see the environment of the street?
Fauxreel: Definitely. The outdoors is a communal space and as an artist working outdoors I should try and make work that provokes the viewer to think or heighten the viewer’s experience of the outdoors when they come into contact with my work.
The final product, suddenly complex, alive. Fauxreel.
Brooklyn Street Art: How does your work affect you?
Fauxreel: Finding this venue to express myself has been the most rewarding experience in my life thus far. It makes me feel like I’m contributing to a larger conversation and has given me a vocation in which I can express my ideas.
This Friday, the 19th, come to English Kills for the opening of a new show of paintings by Andy Piedilato, 6-10pm. Andrew Hurst will be performing around 10.
It will be a happening night in town since Jason Andrew + Norte Maar organized another “Back the Beat: Bushwick Art Spaces Stay Open Late.” Seven Bushwick art spaces are staying open late on the same night, most of them within a short walk of each other:
English Kills, Famous Accountants, Factory Fresh, Sugar, Centotto, Norte Maar, Storefront
Famous Accountants is a little deeper into town but you should try to make it there because they are one of the newest additions and they are awesome. If you and three friends hopped in a cab it would be like 2 dollars and 3 minutes.
Before “street art” became a globally recognized genre, Barry McGee and Margaret Kilgallen were charting their course—one rooted in graffiti, …Read More »
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