All posts tagged: Virginia MOCA

Who is That Masked King? Olek and Virginia MOCA Disrobe Neptune

Who is That Masked King? Olek and Virginia MOCA Disrobe Neptune

Troubled waters here just off Virginia Beach as the tourist season kicks into high gear and families spend the day collecting seashells and the random plastic bottle cap that washes up on the sand.

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

Street Artist Olek ran into a snag this week here as she and a team of volunteers made and installed a crocheted covering for Paul DiPasquale’s original statue of King Neptune that has been here a little over a decade. The two year process for the project with Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) and the New York based artist came to an inauspicious halt during the installation Wednesday when the inclusion of a rubberized gas mask caused a dispute that ended with King Neptune left to brave the elements in his raw mid-prime once again.

“Art is intended to be controversial. To some degree it’s intended to spark dialog,” MOCA executive director Debi Gray was quoted just last month when defending a couple of challenging artworks by artist Mark Ryden in “Turn the Page”, the museums’ Hi-Fructose 10th Anniversary exhibition, a show Olek is also a part of.

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

Whether it was the prospect of another potential controversy so soon, an unapproved design change, or some other perturbed local gadfly whispering in her ear, the director and the museum were not letting the rubber mask go forward during the installation. With only about 60% of the installation completed, all of it came down, leaving the volunteers from the middle and high school and other local artists without the satisfaction of seeing the completed project for this week’s ArtWalk.

In terms of the interstitial approach to documentation that exists on The Internet, it doesn’t matter of course that the project was only partially up for part of one day because there were many good photos captured before it was disassembled, leaving the impression that Olek’s project was a success. Coming from the graffiti and Street Art milieu, we are all accustomed to the ethereal nature of art and our chance encounters with it. Not that this is much conciliation to those who had contributed toward the project.

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

According to statements from the artist and the museum, it appears that the mask would have been allowed to go forward if it had been entirely crocheted – at least that is our reading of the situation. We asked Olek why the monarch of the waters was wearing a mask in the first place, she told us that it was a commentary on our collective responsibility for dumping all kinds of waste into the oceans.

“My mission was to deliver the strongest work that would bring awareness to Mother Nature’s current disturbing situation; namely, the alarming state of our oceans. I added the mask because it was made a strong point. Everyone including the executive director, Debi Gray, and both curators, Alison Byrne and Heather Hakimzadeh agreed that it was a brilliant idea.”

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Aaron McLellan)

“We placed a lot of trust in her and are dismayed that she would take advantage of that,” says Ms. Gray of the museum in an interview with local website WAVY.com. “Although MOCA and the city embraced her message of ocean conservation, the addition was not part of the approved proposal,” a statement from the museum said.

Comments sections on local website stories are mixed with anger at both parties, regret, indifference and naturally, some comments are unhinged, misinformed and completely hilariously unrelated. From our perspective, we’re sorry that an agreement could not be reached and it didn’t work out because we know what the power of art can be. That said, maybe there is a solution yet to be discovered! The summer has just commenced and the future is unwritten.

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

Olek spoke with us about the situation and answered a few questions as well.

Brooklyn Street Art: Did the artist of the sculpture embrace your vision?
OLEK: The first person I contacted regarding the project, and then subsequently the Mask idea was of course the artist, Paul DiPasquale. He loved the idea of crocheting Neptune and agreed that the mask would make a stronger statement.

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

Brooklyn Street Art: Did you have an agreement with the museum that was changed?
OLEK: I had an agreement with the museum and the only real issue that arose was the addition of a huge uncrocheted rubber mask. Initially the museum didn’t want the rubber mask to be included. However, after a number of meetings a compromise was made. The museum and I agreed that if the mask was crocheted, it would be acceptable.

Brooklyn Street Art: Aside from the difficulty of the events, do you feel disappointed that the piece will not be on display?
OLEK: The work created a dialog so I think the piece accomplished something. I hope art in general can inspire and initiate change. As I said in my statement:

“My work is never finished – the continuous response of the viewers makes the art.  My contribution is the tool that helps people realize their own expressions.  I hope that it proves that all things are interconnected.”

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Aaron McLellan)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

De-installation begins with the mask coming off as shown in the above picture.

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. (photo © Olek)

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Olek. King Neptune Intervention for Virginia MOCA. Virginia Beach. June 2016. The Team. (photo © Olek)

 

Our special thanks to Aaron McLellan and his company North End Bag Co. for additional images of them fabricating the mask. The rubber and the aluminum part was provided by Geoff Long.

Also included in Olek’s commentary to us about the project and related events:
This was not completed by the artist alone. MOCA and Olek would like to thank the many volunteers including students from The Visual and Performing Arts Academy at Salem High School and art students from Virginia Beach Middle School. They have spent countless hours to help create this work. They all came and crocheted without knowing what the final project would be. They lent their talent and trust in both MOCA and the artist, knowing that they were spreading a positive message of hope to our community and beyond.

 

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Olek Crochets The New York Times: “Good News” At Virginia MOCA

Olek Crochets The New York Times: “Good News” At Virginia MOCA

It’s a “good news” day! A perfect sunny spring day to flip through the newspaper while sitting at the windowsill and enjoy the gentle breezes that will lead us to summer.

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Olek. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © Olek)

It’s good news especially for Street/crochet/fine artist Olek at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art and her brand new recreation of a shockingly large crocheted front page of The New York Times that she draped on an exterior facade of the museum last week.

“Can you imagine a day that only had good news? I dream that someday there will be at least one day a year with only good news to share,” she told us during an interview and as idealistic as that sounds, you can imagine the effect of that on readers when you experience the scale of this work. In effect, Olek is speaking to the power of the media to shape our perception of the world as much as she is dreaming that there would be enough good news to fill it. Perhaps there is already, she posits, but we’re not focusing on it.

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Olek’s new work ready to be unbundled and completed in situ. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © Olek)

With a lead story about the rise in “underwater parks’ and headlines trumpeting a steep rise in vegetarianism and a global ban on plastic bags, you would be hard-pressed to imagine an above-the-fold selection like this to be featured in the Times ever – especially only four years from now, as indicated by the 2020 date in the masthead. For a variety of reasons, this amount of this sort of news wouldn’t be “fit to print”, as the times likes to refer to its content.

But Olek says that she is dreaming and she was inspired by the “Turn the Page” theme of this show, which encouraged her to look forward as she created this crocheted piece in Poland and New York of 576,000 loops. The exhibition just opened over the weekend celebrates the 10th Anniversary of the San Francisco based Hi-Fructose, a glossy quarterly art magazine that has set a high-quality standard for Low Brow and its various cousins that are bending conceptions and challenging categories of pop, surrealism, hyper-reality and fantasy.

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Olek. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © Rebecca Davidson)

At the opening Saturday, the visitors were treated to a wide variety of contemporary artworks that satisfied and challenged with unusual imagery which plays as much on the last fifty years of pop culture as it does with modern perceptions of traditional art-making. Running through the end of the year before traveling to the Akron Art Museum in Ohio and the Sacramento Art Museum, the show features 51 artists that span a number of the newer genres of surrealism, dark pop, design and influences from street culture of course with names that have grown appreciably in the last decade including  Camille Rose, James Jean, Tara McPherson, Shepard Fairey, Kehinde Wiley and Mark Riley, whose surreal fantasy works here have somehow irked the irony-challenged protectors of goodness some folk in the community.

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Olek. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © Rebecca Davidson)

Hopefully they won’t be outraged by Olek’s new tapestry inspired work which implies that humans are somehow responsible for global warming and pollution, instead of islands of plastic consumer packaging growing organically in our oceans because God wants it that way. In fact, Olek is suggesting that each of us holds a responsibility to sway the headlines with our own actions.

We spoke with Olek about the philosophy behind this new work and how it arrived here for “Turn the Page.”

Brooklyn Street Art: How did you decide to create a work like this featuring what you call only good news?
Olek:
Every paper, TV and radio station will publish only positive news. Negativity creates negativity so I hope positivity will create positivity. I travel a lot and I always stop by the bookstore in the airport and take a look at the front pages of different magazines and newspapers. And there are always all bad news… once I even saw a front page with headlines conjecturing about which celebrities were going to die next. How horrible is that?

So, yes, I dream about good news.

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Olek. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © Rebecca Davidson)

This grand desire served as inspiration for this piece. When I came to Virginia Beach over two years ago I searched different locations for my public projects. I felt strongly that my public piece should be about the environment since Virginia Beach is so connected to the ocean. Later, I came up with the idea to create a wall for the museum as well and wanted to connect the pieces together.

I would like this work to inspire change. All the messages that I crocheted could be actually real. We can start simply with using own bags instead of plastic bags that should be banned globally. We blame big corporations but we should really blame ourselves. Everything starts and ends with a customer.

Sometimes some choices might not be the most convenient but most of us have that choice. Start with replacing the bottled water – especially the one that travels across the globe to your fridge – with your own water bottle that you can refill – especially when you live in a place where you can drink tap water.

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Olek. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © Rebecca Davidson)

Brooklyn Street Art: The style is a departure from most work you’ve done in the past – recreating a fictional newspaper seems like it could be a rather repetitive experience.
Olek:
Crochet is always a repetitive experience. That is why I am trying to challenge myself. I actually did some crocheted portraits a while ago and this piece is the same technique. You might have seen it in the installation I created in collaboration with Michelle Dodson (video link). It requires me for sure to have a total focus and patience.

I started crocheting phone “text” into some of my studio works in 2006 and my very first pieces in 2003 were installed in the forest in upstate New York. I think there is continuity with my previous work but my technique is better now, although I still have plenty to learn and that is what keeps me so in love with crochet.

The process for creating this piece was really long. Every time I go back to Poland and you see me on social media posting images of trees, flowers and sunsets it simply means I am working on something new and do not want to share it yet.

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Olek. Virginia MOCA. April 2016. (photo © OLEK)

I have a place in a forest by a river where no one could ever find me. In that house my grandmother was born, my mother was born and I took my first steps. In the same house I’ve learned how to sew and crochet. It inspires me the most and gives me the most energy.

I remember when I went there in May 2005, the first time I returned after immigrating to New York in 2000, and I exploded with ideas. I crocheted trees around the house, a car, a footbridge… this was long before anyone could think about it. Years later I crocheted a whole stable there that only my grandmother and my parents have seen in person.

I grew up in a city but spent a lot of time in the countryside. This is probably why nature is so close to my heart. And I am devastated as I see our mother nature dying in front of us.

For my recent birthday I spent the day with my family and I celebrated it by hugging 38 trees. This ephemeral performance was shown publicly only on Snapchat and I think the only person who saw it was Faith 47 because I did not know that my account was set to “private”.

Brooklyn Street Art: What were some of the challenges making this?
Olek:
Time! As usual the final and best idea arrives when the deadline approaches. As you know, my work is very time consuming and this piece especially was challenging.

I worked on it with my New York assistant Whitney Spivey and my Polish crochet master Ewa Szylewska. Whitney was working with me on graphics and making sure that the design was good for crocheting.

But before we even started the design process, I asked different people about possible headlines. And to be honest it was more difficult than you might think.

Who helped me? I’ll give you a clue. Who would you guess is hidden behind the name Callie Slonowska? What about the date of the paper? There is much more info here than you might think.

Brooklyn Street Art: A work like this has the potential to spark conversation about topical matters you feel strongly about. Did you have an opportunity to discuss any of them with viewers while you were installing or during the opening?
Olek: I am interested to know how this will inspire and motivate people on many levels.

The most common reaction I’ve heard was: “WOW”. People were admiring both the detailed work and my dedication to it as well as the positive message. Someone suggested that I might have started crocheted photorealism. I hope to start some positive movement. Or maybe someone will publish a new paper with me that would focus on good news only.

Brooklyn Street Art: Hi Fructose has really been on the forefront of an aesthetic that still hasn’t gone mainstream in many ways. How did you feel walking around and seeing the work of these artists at Virginia MOCA?
Olek: I think the show is really good. It is a great selection of artists and the curators chose amazing pieces to represent each artist. The magazine is really great and they are doing an amazing job to keep it up-to-date.

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If you are in the area, please go hear Olek in person June 9th at the museum. Our sincere congratulations to founders Annie Owens and Daniel “Attaboy” Seifert of Hi-Fructose for an astonishingly beautiful 10 years of Hi-Fructose.

 

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This article is also published on The Huffington Post

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