All posts tagged: Northeastern University

El Mac Brings Electricity to Creativity at Northeastern University

El Mac Brings Electricity to Creativity at Northeastern University

El Mac, the LA based aerosol Caravaggio has just illuminated a university wall in Boston with a portrait of his wife as alchemist, a glowing vision completed on the side of Northeastern’s Meserve Hall this month in time for Spring graduation.

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-1

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

“The meeting of art and sciences is key to this campus,” says Todd Mazer, who lives in the city and who spent a lot of time with the artist while he painted, shooting incredible photos of the process. The image based on a photo of Kim presents a perfect marriage of symbols for the university, but also may refer directly to the artists’ personal lineage, he confides.

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-4

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

“Mac’s father went to Northeastern and studied Engineering where he met Mac’s mother, who was an artist going to MassArt at the time,” he explains, “so the lightning, which is science, and the brush, which is art, just may represent his parents. In his distinctive style that includes scientifically chilling paint cans in a cooler with ice, El Mac renders an heroic, comely, and gentle figure even on this rough surface using a circular patterning that appears alternately mechanically digitized or smooth as a Vermeer, depending on your angle and distance from the work.

Even the starry sky may be a reference to his father, we learn, because of his father’s history with things astronomical. “Also the stars above could be of significance too because although Mac was born in LA he moved to Phoenix because his father was pursuing a career in the space program.”

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-3

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

On breaks from plowing through 150 or so cans of paint, El Mac also took time to see art at his dad’s Alma Matter, poking inside the Museum of Fine Arts, Todd tells us. “He mostly painted but since he was just across the street from the MFA it was on his mind and when he got some small windows of time he would head over there,” says Mazer.

“It was nice to see him get off the lift and put down the iced out cans and catch some inspiration from a different surface. I remember him with a pencil and a sketchbook in front of a sculpture and just like earlier in the day at the wall I got a sense he was somewhere he belongs.”

Our sincere thanks to Todd for sharing these images with BSA readers.

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-6

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-2

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-9

Northeastern University (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-5

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-10

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-11

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-8

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

brooklyn-street-art-el-mac-todd-mazer-northeastern-universty-boston-05-15-web-7

El Mac (photo © Todd Mazer)

 

 

<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA

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!

<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA

Read more

Fun Friday 01.14.11

Fun-Friday

It Isn’t Just For Spraypaint Anymore!

“A new generation is making street art that is conceptual, abstract, and even sculptural in nature,” says Carolina A. Miranda, in her new essay for Art News on the changing nature of art in the street. We couldn’t agree more, as we’ve witnessed young artists completely circumventing the established art school/gallery/museum route and taking their message directly to the public for the last decade at least.  It still has the do-it-yourself, in-your-face attitude of it’s predecessors in graffiti, but what has changed is the number of influences and levels of engagement at play in today’s scene.

Read more from Miranda’s piece called “Beyond Graffiti” here:

“Working with pure abstraction,” as described by Miranda – possibly evidenced in this piece by Street Artist MOMO. Photo courtesy the artist’s website, momoshowpalace.com.

And it Isn’t Just for the BK Either

Obviously, cultural and art movements are no longer simply local for more than about 12 minutes, and it is always interesting to see the permutations of Street Art as it moves through the world. And it’s always fun to see how it’s being observed in academia – like this piece about Northeastern University professor Doreen Lee, who is “examining broad social and political developments in Indonesia through a narrowed focus — street art.

Doreen_Lee_226She’s found some of the art to be political, some to be exploratory or ‘art for art’s sake,’ said Lee. But she’s also noted ‘recognizable’ international influences, giving graffiti in Jakarta a striking resemblance to graffiti in New York City or elsewhere around the world. The significance of this resemblance is one of acknowledging and assessing global connections and influences, she said.”

Read the article in the Northeast University Press here:

image © Doreen Lee

The Wrinkles of the City. Shanghai 2010 by JR

New BLU Collection of Animations

Italian Street Artist BLUE has a new DVD out. See the trailer below:

Anita Bryant Pie In the Face

Read more