NYC

Swoon Flotilla Arrives

Swoon Flotilla Arrives

Ahoy Matey! Swoon's Switchback Swashbucklers (photo Laina Karavani)

Ahoy Matey! Swoon’s Switchback Swashbuckers       (photo Laina Karavani)

After weeks on the mighty Hudson River, the peace-loving pirates of Switchback Sea made their heralded entrance at the Port of Deitch in Long Island City, with their effervescent captain at the helm.

Captain Swoon at the Helm (photo Laina Karavani)

Captain Swoon at the Helm (photo Laina Karavani)

Flotilla on the East River with The Manhattan Island Behind (photo Alison Dell)

Flotilla on the East River with The Manhattan Island Behind (photo Alison Dell)

The grand undertaking involved a veritable fleet of talent and beauty to successfully launch and land these ships of dreams, and the eagerly gathered crowd of friends and fans cheered wildly and gaily as each sculptural spectacular made it’s entry to land.

A Jubilant Marching Band Kept the Anticipation High (photo Alison Dell)

A Jubilant Marching Band Kept the Anticipation High (photo Alison Dell)

The boats, built by Swoon and compatriots, harken back to a place we’ve never been, except in childhood fantasies, and the multitude of shipmates aboard them were cleverly clad in ship-chic that alerted others.

Just swashbuckling steps away, the action continued inside the massive ship-hanger, where fans and friends were treated to a massive display of Swoon’s prints, woodcuts, paper, paint, and constructions.

A Cavernous Display of Swoon's Work inside the Gallery (photo Laina Karavani)

A Cavernous Display of Swoon’s Work inside the Gallery

The installation continues through October 18, and will include music and dance performances on selected days until then.

Swimming Cities of Switchback Sea

Images by Laina Karavani and Alison Dell

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Power and Currency: Factory Fresh

Power and Currency: Factory Fresh

“Power and Currency” a new show curated in Bushwick’s Factory Fresh Gallery by Natalie Kates, strikes at the nexus of two words that shake out in the events of most days in New York.  On Brooklyn’s Flushing Avenue, just past Bushwick Ave, the road is rumbling with trucks and potholes, vibrating with the expectations and hopes of a lot of new people these days – artists seeking studio space and escaping high rents, small businesses strong-armed by condo-building piglords, musicians looking for a practice studio, artisans, woodworkers, furniture makers, ……it’s a growing list. You don’t have to look far to see the mounting pressures on the aspiring creative class, and one’s thoughts turn to power and currency more than ever.

Factory Fresh, celebrating three months on Flushing Avenue, is the lovechild of Ali Ha and Adam DeVille, who once fostered a vibrant, audacious, tiny and welcoming gallery of mostly street artists called Orchard Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in the early ‘00s. Over five short years and 20 shows, it was a wellspring of new street art that crunched genres and gave foot to a number of underground street artists, and opportunity to many more.

Flyer for the Closing of Orchard Street Gallery

Flyer for the Closing of Orchard Street Gallery

But powerful “Luxury Condo Fever” had been coursing through the valley of lower Manhattan, and when the slimy, blinding affliction caught their landlord, Ali and Ad fought in court to save Orchard Street Gallery, their community and their dream. The fight lasted for 8 months, before they rallied in April “06 and gave their “Grand Closing” show to say goodbye to the soon destroyed building, featuring work by artists they had heralded, some for their first solo shows, including Jet and Rubble, Abe Lincoln Jr, Solar, Rep1, GoreB, as well as shows by Magmo and MCA, Skewville, Pufferella, Overspray Magazine and Azstar.

With more guts and gusto, they eventually set up shop in a former bodega storefront in industrial Brooklyn, where a nascent street art scene was quickly ramping up. “The surrounding Bushwick galleries have been wonderfully supportive, there is a great neighborhood vibe and I really like and respect them,” says Ali.  A quick hike in almost any any direction from the gallery finds current street art installations from Swoon, Frank Duval, Judith Supine, Gaia, and Chris Stain.

Smart alecs and artists Welcomed

Smart alecs and artists Welcomed

The Factory Fresh coronation featured Orchard alumni Skewville during the Bushwick Open Studios weekend in June – an instant success that was swamped with fans old and new; It quickly sprayed a large stenciled red star on the Bushwick map, alongside other newcomers like English Kills, which is a sneaker-throws’ distance down Flushing. But don’t expect the haughty chilled white box here; Factory Fresh is just as committed to the community of artists as ever;  over the summer they hosted a show that paid tribute to the hardworking artists and interns who helped make the gallery launch successful with a showcase of their work.

With Fall roaring in, “Power and Currency” opens with 22 artists in tow.  A huge fan of Orchard Street, “style curator” Natalie Kates was asked to put together her inaugural show. “She came to our 8th show at Orchard Street which was Elik in January 2005… I always appreciated the way she handled herself”

“We are trying to expand our horizons, she knows things I have no clue about but blends them with things I know and love. Natalie surprises me every minute, it’s exciting,” says Ali.

For her part, Ms. Kates, a street art collector, was thrilled to get a chance to create a show, “Ali and Adam were the first art gallery in Manhattan to show Street art at the Orchard Street Gallery space.  My first purchases were three ELIK panel’s that I still to this day adore. When Factory Fresh approached me to curate a show I jumped on the opportunity.”

On the horizon, the auburn Ms. Ha exhibits her customary patience with the process, “We are taking it one day at a time, mostly. I have a few tricks up my sleeve but I also don’t like to plan things too much, you never know what the next day might bring. I like surprising myself, I like surprising my patrons.”

“I think working with lots of people is what will keep Factory Fresh current.  It takes a village, right?”

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INTERVIEW with style curator Natalie Kates about “Power and Currency”

Brooklyn Street Art: What first drew your interest to street art (or urban art)?

Natalie Kates:
I have always had a heightened visual sense and have been aware of urban art since the 80’s style old skool bubble letter tags and throw ups.  Some of my favorites were Lee, Seen, Martine, Futura 2000 and of course Keith Haring and Basquiat.  Having deep roots in the fashion industry I first started to notice a visual shift in the urban landscape with Kaws hijacking Fashion Ad Campaigns in the late ‘90’s.

Almost over night there seem to be a change of guard.  The new wave of urban artist had a new voice in the medium of stencils, wheat pasted cut-outs, stickers and glass tiles.  I wanted to know everything about this movement.

Funny Money by DFace (photo Natalie Kates)

Funny Money by DFace (photo Natalie Kates)

Brooklyn Street Art: It is not unusual to hear of an individual curating a show at a gallery, museum, or even nightclub.  What is a “style curator” in the context of a gallery?

Natalie Kates:”Style Curator” is a title/term/concept I came up with to best describe myself and what I am trying to manifest in the world. To me a style curator is a person who is able to think and curate on multiple levels. For example not only am I responsible for curating the artist but also responsible for curating music, guest lists, invites and the overall stylistic look and feel of event. A “Style Curator” is a person who curates style. Style can come in many forms such as fashion, art, music and esthetics.  It is a way of thinking and life.

Nicoz (photo Natalie Kates)

Nicoz (photo Natalie Kates)

Brooklyn Street Art: When street art enters the gallery, how does its’ energy change?
Natalie Kates: I am not sure if the energy changes, but I think the perception changes when in the context of a gallery.  A gallery can give street art it’s credibility the genre deserves.

Brooklyn Street Art: One artist collective, Peripheral Media Projects, recently has been creating large canvasses of storm-trooper looking police in Warholian “Silver Elvis” arrangements.  Do you think this show is influenced by fears of state power?_
Natalie Kates: PMP or Peripheral Media Projects is in the “Power & Currency” show.  They have come up with an amazing installation of “Riot Cops” on Plexiglas.  I don’t know if the images are influenced by fears of state power._
What I take from the images and the installation is a fear to conform, to be apart of a hive like mindset, the fear to not celebrate our differences and flaunt out human imperfections.

Peripheral Media Projects "Riot Cop" (detail)

Peripheral Media Projects “Riot Cop”   (photo Natalie Kates)

Brooklyn Street Art: Aiko and Bast have been introducing more graphic elements of sexualized or sexual imagery into their work.  How does sex enter the power equation?  Currency?_
Natalie Kates: Sex is power and does hold a currency.  Look back in history, Cleopatra, Helen of Troy, Evita Peron, all these women had this power and wielded its’ currency.

Brooklyn Street Art: Are there any examples in the show of the intersection of both power and currency?_
Natalie Kates: There are many amazing works of art in this show.  If I had to single out one piece it would be from artist Tom Fruin.  His piece is entitled “Bud Klan Church”.

Bud Klan Church by Tom Fruin (photo Natalie Kates)

Bud Klan Church by Tom Fruin (photo Natalie Kates)

Made from cut out Budweiser cans with (Klu Klux) Klan’s men illustrations in the silhouette of a southern church on fire. This is a solid piece that speaks of power and currency on many levels such as religion, fear, entitlement and alienation to name a few.

Brooklyn Street Art: From a curator’s point of view, what does the whole show look like when it all comes together in one location?
Natalie Kates: This show is a marriage of two art schools.  My attempt is a symbiotic relationship between the contemporary and street artist.  I feel the street artists can give a cool factor to the contemporary art while the contemporary artists can in a sense legitimize the street artist and give them their much needed nod in the global art world.

<<Brooklyn Street Art>>

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Factory Fresh

is located at 1053 Flushing Avenue between Morgan and Knickerbocker, off the L train Morgan Stop

“Power and Currency”

Opening Reception September 5, 2008 from 6-10pm
Show runs September 5 – October 3, 2008
Curated by: Natalie Kates

NatalieKates.com

Factory Fresh Website

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“Power and Currency” at Factory Fresh

“Power and Currency”

Opening Reception September 5, 2008 from 6-10pm
Show runs September 5 – October 3, 2008

Curated by: Natalie Kates
at Factory Fresh 1053 Flushing Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
Authority – BeautyMilitiaAgeTitlePopularity – SexWealthTechnology

What is power? How is it bestowed? Of what is it composed? Is currency a form of power? Why? Why not? This
groundbreaking group show explores two of mankind’s most consequential and enduring forces.


Power – (pou-er) – noun

Ability to do or act: capability of doing or accomplishing something.
Political or national strength.
Great or marked ability to do or act; strength; might; force.
The possession of control or command over others: authority; ascendancy.

Currency – (kur-uh n-see) – noun.

Something this is used as a medium of exchange, money
General acceptance: prevalence: vogue
A time or period during which something is widely accepted and circulated
Circulation, as of coin

Much more than just its literal definition, power can be a form of currency. Likewise, currency can create or instill power or take it away.  In this group show, artists will explore and interpret these two fundamental forces, using a palette of visual and audio tools and components. Both power and currency can be alluring and addictive. The downside is that they can be destructive, alienating, elitist, and ego-driven.  As history shows through its great dictators, power and currency can also be used for the betterment of mankind.


ARTIST INCLUDE:
AIKO
BRIAN KENNY
CURTIS READEL
D*FACE
DAVID SCHILD
DEER GOD
DESI SANTIAGO
ESPO
FENX
GAIA
JASON URBAN
JOHN HITCHCOCK
JORDAN EAGLES
LIKE ONE
LOVETTE/CODAGNONE
NATHAN MORTAN
NICOLAS WAGNER
NICOZ BALBOA
NPK
PERIPHERAL MEDIA PROJECTS
STEN AND LEX
TOM FRUIN

NatalieKates.com

Factory Fresh Website

Factory Fresh

is located at 1053 Flushing Avenue between Morgan and Knickerbocker, off the L train Morgan Stop

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Week in Images 08.24.08

Flying to the Concert Hall; Elbowtoe's Bluebird on N. 6    (photo Jaime Rojo)

Flying to the Concert Hall; Elbowtoe (photo Jaime Rojo)

Not a lot of work by fine artist Elbowtoe to be seen on the street recently, as he is rumored to be feverishly preparing for a massive rollout in gargantuan galleries globally (just getting carried away with colorful descriptors, sorry)…..  That’s why this poignant pasteup seems so much more precious.

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The Week in Images 08.17.08

JMR in Williamsburg future Condo site   (photo Jaime Rojo)

JMR in Williamsburg future Condo site (photo Jaime Rojo)

This two panel installation on the corner of North 8th and Driggs appeared, mysteriously disappeared, and re-appeared within one week!  Stories abound – but our favorite one is that construction dudes took it down to access the work-site and kind of damaged it, so they reinstalled the panels stronger and more solidly than before.  That’s teamwork!

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Broken Crow – One Week In Brooklyn

Broken Crow – One Week In Brooklyn

Once you’re in the thick of it,

summer in Brooklyn is about getting out of your hot apartment and sitting on the stoop with yer homies, watching the short-shorts and long legs walking by. You may hit the Siren Festival in Coney Island for the loud music and cold beer (and the Cyclone if you dare). And probably some BBQ’s on the roof, and frisbee in the park…..

And of course you’ll want to mount some gigantic eye-popping murals of mountain goats, owls, and bone-piles on walls for seven consecutive days. Well, at least if your name is Broken Crow, you will.

Safari Buddies in the Bushwick Sky (Broken Crow)

Safari Buddies in the Bushwick Sky (Broken Crow)

The Minneapolis artist John Grider, together with new Broken Crow partner Paint Goggles and their buddy Over Under, got up on some very large spaces in a roller-coaster rapid week that just ended in multi-storied murals in Bushwick. Arriving in a truck full of paint, plaster and scaffolding, Brooklyn is the latest city Broken Crow has sanctified with his angel-winged stenciled boy and an ark’s worth of animals trotting along side. Check him out in Paris with Vexta, in Waterloo Tunnel in London at the Cans Festival, and of course in stencil Mecca – Melbourne.

Like always, the Broken Crow returns to Minneapolis, and that’s where he reflects on the maiden voyage to Brooklyn.

BrooklynStreetArt: For the record, how many murals in how many days?

John Grider: 4 murals in 6 days.

BrooklynStreetArt: And a couple cans of paint?

John Grider: I think we went through somewhere around 10 gallons of bucket paint, and at least 70 or 80 cans of aerosol…

image Broken Crow

BrooklynStreetArt: Who’s idea was this?

John Grider: It wasn’t any one person’s idea, really. The whole trip was a bit of a collaboration, even in its planning stages. Two or three months ago I got an email from a man named Darren in Carroll Gardens who was looking to have two walls painted on the outside of his house. Fifteen or twenty emails later, after all the logistics were hammered out with Paint Goggles, we got into our van and drove east.

Image Luna Park

BrooklynStreetArt: How did you and Paint Goggles start working as a crew?

John Grider: Mike put me in my second art show back in 2004, and we’ve been good friends ever since. We shared a studio for a couple of years, and he’s always been down to help cut stencils and paint them wherever and whenever, he’s been behind the scenes for a good portion of the murals I’ve done, it all evolved really organically.

It helps that he keeps me calm, I’m perpetually calling him up like:

Image Broken Crow

“HOLY F***ING SH**!!! I JUST GOT AN EMAIL FROM _______ (insert random city here)!!! THEY WANT ME TO COME PAINT __________ (insert random wall here) !!! WHAT THE F*** DO I DO???!!!?? FF*************************K!!!!”.
…and he’s always real calm about it like “I guess we’re gonna go there and paint” and then I’m like “Oh yeah, alright. Cool..”.

BrooklynStreetArt: What made you pick Bushwick?

John Grider: Bushwick picked us, sort of. Over Under had one of the walls lined up but he hadn’t had time to paint it yet. The first night we were in town, he mentioned that he had a wall that we should paint around the corner from the restaurant we were eating at, and 4 days later we were done with the first two walls and ready to paint the third one. We hadn’t even seen the wall until we rolled up on it with a van full of paint.

BrooklynStreetArt: You use many animals in your work, like the recurring devilish mountain goat Billy. Is there a voice speaking through these animals?

John Grider: I have no idea what all these animals are up to these days. When I’m painting them, it’s like a really long drawn out process of dropping off a stray dog at the pound. You can wish well for them, you can hope that they have a long and healthy life, but there are a lot of unforeseen circumstances that lead to untimely bad things, and you can’t really leave something somewhere without fully accepting that everything has its own life-span and that it’s out of your control.

BrooklynStreetArt: Is it true that you were a forest fire fighter? Did that deepen your connection to animals?

John Grider: Yeah, I did that for about a year and a half, (and) if anything it strengthened a couple of theories that I had. The first was that I wasn’t cut out for anything even remotely close to traditional employment, and that bad management is a universal and all too common reality in virtually every awesome or crappy work environment, everywhere.

The second was that conflict is at the root of virtually every interesting story ever told, or every story that has been told more than once. Fire versus water, good versus evil, city versus countryside, man versus nature, nature versus man, all of these things are universal concepts, all of these ideas have made their way into what I do in some way or another…

Image Broken Crow

BrooklynStreetArt: Other images of rural life appear in your work, spare looking barns and farmhouses, beer-swilling chubby dudes in their man-briefs contemplating piles of skulls. Where do you draw upon for these, and what do they mean to you?

John Grider: They’re all really bad jokes, mostly. Or a visual play on words. Sometimes I’ll have the reference photo figured out before I have the punchline to the joke, sometimes it’s just me trying to figure out why people say things, or do things, or act a certain way. Mostly I’m just trying to keep myself entertained in a world gone boring.

Images Broken Crow

BrooklynStreetArt: Is the scruffy boy with wings somewhat autobiographical?

John Grider: Only in that he can see the future sometimes.

Image Broken Crow

BrooklynStreetArt: You did graffiti a few years back – how does the work you’re doing today differ?

John Grider: Nowadays, when my mom asks me where I’ve been painting, she doesn’t really seem all that mad about it.

BrooklynStreetArt: Your murals take a lot of planning to execute – How important is composition?

John Grider: Composition is really really really important. There are paintings that I have no idea why I like them, other than that they’re well composed. It’s absolutely imperative that you maintain your composure under any and all circumstances.

Image Luna Park

BrooklynStreetArt: Can you tell if a wall is going to be difficult to work on?

John Grider: Almost everything can be worked around, or worked into the composition, or dealt with as needed. Every wall has sh**ty aspects, and great aspects. It’s the people that make any experience great, and when I look back at painting a wall, it’s the people that I remember, but not the wall itself.

Every city has that 15 year old kid that wants to help paint, every city has that thug that wants to write some poem to some girl, and every city has that 8 year old that’s completely blown away that you’re painting there, and watches your every move, and that will someday paint some sh*t that will make everything you ever painted, ever, look like a total waste of time.

I’m actually relieved most of the time when these spirits make their presence known, they’re good omens.

Image Broken Crow

BrooklynStreetArt: These projects demand a huge amount of art supplies, person-hours, and resources. Is it a challenge to manage them?

John Grider: Yes and no. It’s gotten to a point where there’s almost a standard checklist, like what colors do we need, do we have enough black, do we have extra duct tape, a place to sleep, gas money? All of that stuff has almost become second nature though. I’d say that there’s at least as much time spent on logistics as there is on actually painting, if not more time planning and less time painting. I’d like to say that I’m spending more time painting, but I’m lazy. Artists are inherently lazy people.

BrooklynStreetArt: Which artists have inspired you?

John Grider: This question is always a total mind-f**k for me. I’d have to say that every artist, ever, has inspired me somehow, be it for better or for worse. Really crappy art is always totally inspiring because it’s just fearless in its sh**tiness. For example, I’m completely dumbfounded that Rothko has entire museums dedicated to him.. if all I had to do was paint big squares, I’d be a thousand times more prolific than I am today… process does not equal content, I think this is a really important concept that people should be talking about at art schools.

BrooklynStreetArt: You’ve been in shows with artists like Vexta, Logan Hicks, C215, Faile…Who is doing stuff that you admire today?

John Grider: Vexta, Logan Hicks, C215, Faile, all of these folks are amazing. Sten & Lex, Meggs, Miso, Ghost Patrol, Gaia, Elbow Toe, Vrno, Over Under, Paint Goggles, Gutter Gold Digger, Megan Larkin, Stef Alexander, Eric Inkala, Drew Peterson, Isaac Arvold, Hardland/Heartland, Anthony Lister, Dan Monick, Orticanoodles, Snub, Fark, Alto-Contraste, Roadsworth, Blu, M-City, I could go on and on and on forever.

BrooklynStreetArt: Now that you are back in Minneapolis, where to next?

John Grider: I think I’d like to go swimming as much as possible for the duration of the summer, just to make up for the complete and total lack of swimming that seems to be happening out there in Brooklyn. I’ve also got a bunch of projects and commissions that I haven’t had time to get to, that will likely take priority over swimming. There’s also a show at Hot Pop in Milwaukee opening September 12th, and a show at Pure Evil Gallery in London in October with the whole Stencil History X crew. Plus there’s a ton of walls in Minnesota that I haven’t had time to get to yet… to be completely honest, I have no idea what’s going on anymore. It’s all a total blur to me. I’m mostly just really happy that I get to spend a month at home with my 7 month old daughter.

She’s amazing.

Image Broken Crow

NEXT UP for Broken Crow:

After an eventful truck ride back to Minneapolis, Broken Crow has been putting up murals in Duluth (in his home state) in collaboration with Mike Fitzsimmons, Eric Inkala, Isaac Arvold, and Drew Peterson.

The rest of 2008 and ’09 will bring two shows in Milwaukee and London, a special project with C215, and more fun in Bristol, Berlin, and of course Minneapolis.

John will be touring work around with the Stencil History X folks for the duration of global warming.

Broken Crow website

Broken Crow Flickr

Paint Goggles

OverUnder

Thanks to the talented and beautiful LunaPark

Learn more about stencil art:

Stencil Pirates by Josh MacPhee

Stencil Graffiti by Tristan Manco

Stencil Nation: Graffiti, Community, and Art by Russell Howze

Stencil Graffiti Capital: Melbourne by Jake Smallman and Carl Nyman

Wall and Piece by Banksy

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Gallerie Pulaski de Celso et Infinity

Danny Licul, infinity, & Tefsukaz . Photo by Celso.

Danny Licul, infinity, & Tefsukaz . Photo by Celso.

POST NO BILLS @Gallerie Pulaski

curated by Celso & Infinity

Just north of the People’s Republic of Brooklyn, across the Pulaski Bridge, lies a nice patch of pavement called Long Island City, Queens.  Art fans always make sure to hit the Sculpture Center, PS1, and 5 Pointz – which is famous to taggers and street artists alike; a protected haven and prized pantheon of the creative spirit.  If you were to throw a molotov cocktail from 5 Pointz and  PS1 had the wind at your back you might smash into a marriage of both right now: an outside street gallery show called POST NO BILLS, featuring the work of about 25 intrepid explorers installed thoughtfully on a block long stretch of construction site walls.

Inga Huld Tryggvadottir. Photo by Celso.

Inga Huld Tryggvadottir. Photo by Celso.

Royce Bannon. Photo by Celso.

Royce Bannon. Photo by Celso.

Abe Lincoln Jr.(with Infinity). Photo by Celso.

Abe Lincoln Jr.(with Infinity). Photo by Celso.

One of the curators of this show, Celso, put down his hammer and nails for a minute to talk about his latest project, as well as his own recent solo and collaborative work:

BrooklynStreetArt: So you and your co-curator Infinity have put together a sizeable outdoor show called POST NO BILLS. Even with two people, it looks like it was a lot of work.

Celso: It wasn’t too bad. infinity and I have been working together for some time, so we can get things done quickly and easily. We both tend to be in agreement on what works and what doesn’t and that makes things easier. Plus, we both love the color orange.

BSA: How long have you two been working together?

Celso: It’s been three to four years, mostly through Endless Love Crew shenanigans, but in the last year or so, the two of us have done a lot of collaborative pieces (paintings, smaller murals, etc.), and now we’re also working together at a more massive level. infinity has lots of evil plans brewing…

Bushwick Brooklyn Mural with Celso, Infinity, and Deeker collaboration. Photo by Celso.

Bushwick Brooklyn Mural with Celso, Infinity, and Deeker collaboration. Photo by Celso.

BSA: Is Infinity trustworthy and reliable?

Celso: Not with money or women.

BSA: What was the main challenge getting the stuff up?

Celso: Some of the Post No Bills artists had never put work on the street before like James Willis and Inga Huld Tryggvadottir. James is an established gallery artist and he works in charcoal. This means that his works are incredibly easy to smudge. Now, add wheatpaste to the mix and it can get pretty ugly.

Likewise, Inga is an incredible cutter. She makes these fantastic works that are made out of layers upon layers of paper. This may work in a gallery, but on the street, it was a challenge to secure it to a wall. We used a ton of wood glue as well as a few screws to keep everything up. Despite the challenges of installation, the pieces really rock on the street.

BSA: So, really, it is a gallery.  Damn, I missed the opening!  Were there white wine and cheese cubes?
Celso: This Friday June 27th is the opening. We’ll have a cooler and a cheese tray. Maybe some showgirls too.

BSA: How did you hook up that space? I notice you have ceilings to conveniently shield your gallery visitors from the sun and rain.
Celso: I got the space through chashama, an arts organization based here in the city. They’re a non-profit that provides artists with subsidized studio and gallery spaces. They hooked me up with this spot. And yeah, what attracted me to it was the second level roof. It allowed us to put up two floors worth of art which are open 24/7. Next time we’ll try and add a penthouse….

BSA: Whose idea was it to take the gallery approach to the street?
Celso: This is something I’ve been thinking about for some time. I’ve curated a number of shows in galleries and I’ve worked on the street. And this seemed like a logical extension of both: an art exhibit on the street. When I saw the spot, I knew it would work. Plus, you can’t beat the traffic. It’s right next to the Pulaski Bridge and the Midtown tunnel.

BSA: In a way, the huge mural you did recently (very close to this one) was an outdoor gallery too.  But this one seems more formalized, with a gallery/museum presentation.
Celso: Yeah, I would say that “Standing at the Crossroads” (which we did with Deeker and Royce Bannon) is a more traditional mural. It’s so bright and over the top that it needed an unobstructed wall to work.

“Standing at the Crossroads” Mural with Infinity, Royce Bannon, Deeker. Photo by Luna Park.

“Standing at the Crossroads” Mural with Infinity, Royce Bannon, Deeker. Photo by Luna Park.

Celso: When I first saw the site where the Galerie Pulaski is installed, it looked pretty crappy. The construction walls were battered and painted blue and the area was surrounded in scaffolding. I knew that if we painted it gallery-white, the art would really pop. Now, people who’ve never set foot in a gallery or museum are forced to do it as they run out to catch a bus or train. Force feeding art every once in a while is a good thing.

BSA: Have you seen the gallery that was posted on a worksite in Williamsburg on S.5th and Berry this spring?  Think that one was sponsored by an energy drink.
Celso: No, I missed it.

BSA: While you have a lot of singular pieces all over the city, I notice that a lot of your work has been collaborative – Endless Love Crew is built on that model.  What appeals to you about collaborative shows?
Celso: It’s fun to work as a crew. There’s the partying and jams, but I also feel as if you learn a lot just hanging out with other artists. It’s art school without the blowhards and can be really energizing. _
But I do like to do a mix of solo and group stuff. I’ve worked on a lot of ELC stuff, but I’ve also done my own projects. I’ve worked a lot independently here in New York, doing posters, firebox shrines and the painted Plexiglas pieces, and I did a series of painted political signs in L.A. and in upstate New York. __The reason my independent work may not always be easy to find is because each piece I lay out on the street is an original. No Kinko’s bulls**t. Nothing is mass. Every piece is a hand-drawn and hand-painted. It’s a lot more work, but it keeps things more interesting. Plus, there’s something to be said for keeping pieces special.

SHRINES by Celso

“Our Lady of Monsey Trails”, by Celso. Photo by Celso.

“Our Lady of Monsey Trails”, by Celso. Photo by Celso.

Detail of “Nuestra Señora de Arte Calle, Patrona de los Grafiteros”, by Celso. Photo by Celso.

Detail of “Nuestra Señora de Arte Calle, Patrona de los Grafiteros”, by Celso. Photo by Celso.

PLEXI by Celso

Supah-stah plexiglas installation. Photo by C-Monster

Supah-stah plexiglas installation. Photo by C-Monster

Celso Plexi overlay of Frank Gehry in LA. Photo by C-Monster

Celso Plexi overlay of Frank Gehry in LA. Photo by C-Monster

BSA: There are a huge number of construction sites in Brooklyn right now.  Do you think you’ll do another gallery show soon?
Celso: Yeah, I’m already working on another one but the location is secret for now 😉

POST NO BILLS

curated by Celso & Infinity

with Abe Lincoln Jr., Celso, Ceito, Creeper, Darkcloud, DAVe, Elbow-Toe, Endless Love Crew, F.Trainer, Gaia, Gore-B, Jenny Holzer, infinity, Danny Licul, Evelyn Metzger, Milquetoast, Momo, Dean Radinovsky, Abigail Rothberg, Royce Bannon, Tefsukaz, Inga Huld Tryggvadottir, James Willis and friends

Gallerie Pulaski
48-15 11th St. @ Jackson Avenue

By Subway
Take the G to 21st Street Station
Take the 7 to Vernon Blvd – Jackson Ave Station

Celso’s work can be seen Here
Endless Love Crew too

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Poets of Paste at Ad Hoc

ELBOW-TOE, Armsrock, Gaia & Imminent Disaster

June 13th – July 13th, 2008

Opening Reception: Friday, June 13th, 7-10pm

Poets of the Paste unites four figurative artists known for their striking images that comment on nature, contemporary society and the everyday lives we live. These artists transform public spaces to moments of private reflection with an emphasis on careful craftsmanship. ELBOW-TOE, Armsrock, Gaia, and Imminent Disaster have left their marks on the urban landscapes, generously giving their talent to the public, to time and to the elements. Now they bring their skills together at Ad Hoc Art; through drawings, stencils, paintings and block prints incorporated onto various media.

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Poets of Paste go LARGE at Ad Hoc

Poets of the Paste

OPENING Friday June 13,
7 – 10 pm

featuring ELBOW-TOE, Armsrock, Gaia, and Imminent Disaster

Four stars of beautifully heart-rendered paste-ups on the bricks and boards all around us, Ad Hoc astoundingly unites these commentators; helping us read the tea leaves.  Hats off to the good peeps who chose to engender such love for the human condition and the fantastical world.

images courtesy of Ad Hoc

Each of these poets of paste could easily fill a gallery with their imagination and skill; So much stronger is the chord they collectively strum.

Gallery director Andrew Michael Ford has curated an incredibly strong group of drawings, stencils, paintings and block prints.

Ad Hoc Art
49 Bogart Street Unit 1G, Buzzer 22
Brooklyn, New York 11206

Telephone:     718-366-2466

Website for Ad Hoc

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Irony is the BAST Policy

Nose Candy

with BAST

Brooklynite Gallery
334 Malcolm X Boulevard

Opening Night
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
7 – 10PM

Behold Brookynite! Yonder grows a New gallery in Bed Stuy and that is thy name; the Great Eastern Expansion emanates further out from the crusty rock of gothamite.  Brooklynite is a natural outgrowth of that thing that the Brooklyn art scene is famous for; community.

Brooklyn born and bred, Bast returns to blaze the trail a little further;  A continuous contributor to the Brooklyn street art scene for more than a decade, Bast is punk collage perfection – putrid pop and sexified grit; pure revolution de papel.

This time BAST has been sniffing around the pretty glitter and he blasts forward with certain and jarring new works that bring a rush to the senses, and base titillation to the loins. In addition, he features 4 plaster busts of disgusting creatures mounted like trophies with mad bling and even rhinestone studded grills.  The  pig, the alien – basically all of them are disconcerting in their resemblance to people I’ve known or been related to.

Brooklynite Gallery 347.405.5976

The show runs June 10 – July 12, 2008

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Brooklyn Street Art Auction Benefit

Brooklyn Street Art Auction Benefit
benefiting Free Arts NYC
celebrating the book release “Brooklyn Street Art”

April 25th, 2008
7-10 p.m. (press preview 6-7)

Ad Hoc Art
49 Bogart Street
Bushwick, Brooklyn
www.adhocart.org
718.366.2466

Confirmed Street Artists include; Anera, Armsrock, Borf, Celso, C.Damage, DAIN, Dark Clouds, Deeks, DiRQuo, Elbowtoe, ELC, Fauxreel, Flower Face Killah, Gaia, GoreB, Haculla, 
Infinity, Judith Supine, 
Jp, McMutt, MOMO, Noah Sparkes, Royce Bannon, 
 Skewville, Swoon, Dan Witz, and WK Interact

A silent auction to benefit the youth and family creative arts and mentoring programs of Free Arts NYC is being generously hosted by Ad Hoc Art on Friday, April 25th to celebrate the launch of “Brooklyn Street Art,” followed by a booty shakin after-party.

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