Posts Tagged ‘Art Stunts’

NEWS///LONDON///ADAM NEATE TO LEAVE 1,000 PIECES OF FREE ART ON THE STREETS THIS FRIDAY NITE

November 13th, 2008

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For better or worse, London remains the undisputed nexus of the “street art” universe where art stunts reign supreme and the city’s young upstarts avidly compete in a constant battle of one-upsmanship in the public eye. This Firday nite painter ADAM NEATE in conjunction with venerable gallery ELMS LESTERS PAINTING ROOMS have joined forces to up the ante a bit in presenting “The London Show,” a conceptual event whereby the entire city of London will become an impromptu gallery of the artist’s work after he deposits 1,000 free pieces of art in the metropolis’ endless maze of nooks and crannies:

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“As dusk falls on Friday 14th November, Adam Neate will be claiming the streets of London as his personal “gallery” by leaving 1000 artworks scattered across the city. Teams of distributors will begin under cover of darkness at the furthest edges of the capital, working their way towards the centre by daybreak on Saturday, randomly distributing individually numbered ‘unique’ multiples. For one night only, “The London Show” adopts the whole capital as its gallery space and rethinks the idea of the ‘private view’. There won’t be any queues to see the work, no chilled wine, the artist himself won’t necessarily be present – just one thousand chance encounters that make up a conceptually pre-meditated potlatch. Adam Neate reckons to have left around 6,000 paintings on cardboard on the city’s streets over a period dating back many years. But that was at the height of his anonymity and now, with his star in its ascendancy in the British contemporary art scene; his distinctive style has become instantly recognizable. ‘The whole concept when I started the free art thing was challenging the notion of art as a commodity and its worth in society,’ says the artist. ‘Now I’m taking that to another level, testing the viability of separating art from commerce.’ To create the works, Neate has worked with a silkscreen printer to ‘mass-produce’ the same number of paintings in a couple of weeks that it would have taken him a year to make by hand. “I’m interested in that Warhol idea of the brand as assisted readymade. Apart from creating the master image in stencil, I haven’t had to touch these works at any point in their production, even the signature is rubber-stamped – and although they’re multiples, each one is compositionally unique.” Printed on cardboard and shrink-wrapped in cellophane, there’s a deliberate attempt to blur the boundary between painting, print, and product. “I remember as a kid going into Woolworth’s and seeing laminated prints of that famous Tretchikoff painting ‘The Chinese Girl’ and thinking it was great that people could have that iconic image at home for next to nothing. I’m hoping that for some people who come across one of these new paintings, they’ll pick it up not because they recognize it as one of mine, but just because they connect with the image and would like to hang it on their wall.” When they get it home, each new owner can decide whether their chance acquisition of an art work by Adam Neate has greater value with the shrink wrap left on (pure product), or taken off (pure painting). Whichever they decide, they still own one thousandth of an extraordinary public art project.”

High concept or just hype? You be the judge…

LONDON///MARC QUINN UNVEILS SOLID GOLD KATE MOSS SCULPTURE: MEN EVERYWHERE SUDDENLY APPRECIATE “MODERN ART”

October 6th, 2008

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” ‘Er bum looks even smaller in gold… ”

In what is surely the single event that turned even the most aesthetically impaired men of the world into modern art lovers, renowned British sculptor MARC QUINN unveiled his solid gold KATE MOSS sculpture at the BRITISH MUSEUM this weekend as part of the “Statuephilia” show that also included works by DAMIEN HIRST, RON MUECK, NOBLE & WEBSTER, and ANTONY GORMLEY. Titled “Siren,” the piece is made of solid 18K gold and cost nearly $3 million USD to fabricate, with nearly all the cost going to the price of gold. It is the largest solid gold sculpture made since ancient Egypt. At 11o pounds, the piece weighs about the same as its waifish subject and is currently on display in the museum’s Nereid Gallery among statues of Greek goddesses including—fittingly—Aphrodite. Said Quinn at the Statue’s unveiling this weekend, “The sculpture is really about whether we make images or they make us. It’s about trying to live up to impossible dreams and immortality … For Kate, she thinks it lifts into her into a mythical level. I think she very much loved it because she understands the difference between her image and her self.” The piece remains on display at the museum through the end of the year and Quinn expects the sculpture to fetch in the neighborhood of $20 million USD when it’s finally sold following the exhibition. Reports of Pete Doherty camping out in front of the sculpture and staring longingly from morning till nite since the opening have been confirmed. HAVE A LOOK: Read the rest of this entry »

LONDON///AFTER THE GOLD RUSH…

July 4th, 2007

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In the ongoing category of “art stunts” comes PAUL INSECT’s recent campaign of dumping gold bars in strategic locations around London in anticipation of his forthcoming solo show at the hotspot LAZARIDES GALLERY on July 20th titled “Bullion.” This weekend saw the artist secretively dumping a stack of the gold bricks on Old Street near the tube station, each of which were signed by the artist and carried the caveat “if you have me, I was stolen.” These days being an artist seems to require a marketing degree to boot. Banksy should start teaching a PhD course once he finally throws in the towel…

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Street shots care of Artofthestate on Flickr…

NEWS///THE NY TIMES LOVES “THE SPLASHER”…

July 3rd, 2007

As the vandalism vandal squad known as “The Splasher” continues to streak Manhattan’s street art, the recently graffiti-obsessed NY Times has again reported on the phenomenon. PEEP THE READ:

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AS STREET ART GOES COMMERCIAL, A RESISTANCE RAISES A REAL STINK
By COLIN MOYNIHAN
SOURCE: NYTimes

The covert campaign targeting street art began about seven months ago, with blobs of paint that appeared overnight, obscuring murals and wheat-pasted art on walls in Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan. Arcane messages were pasted at the sites, but it was difficult to ask for an explanation. The author was never identified. Then in November, during a panel discussion on women and graffiti that included a street artist called Swoon, a figure wearing a hooded sweatshirt flung a sheaf of fliers using similar language from a balcony overlooking an Read the rest of this entry »

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MOCA’S “COLLECTION: THE FIRST THIRTY YEARS” PROVES THE MUSEUM SHOULD BE AROUND FOR 30 MORE

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Despite MOCA’s financial woes of late and near collapse last year amid the chaos of the economic holocaust, the veritable Southland institution seems on to a bright future now, having secured ST buddy JEFFREY DEITCH as its new director (starting June 1) and financial security (for the moment). If ever there was a time to celebrate, it is now. HAVE A LOOK:

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FEATURE///IN THE STUDIO WITH SHEPARD FAIREY AS HE PREPARES FOR DEITCH GALLERY’S CLOSING SHOW

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By now it’s no secret that JEFFREY DEITCH is closing shop in downtown NYC to head West for the sunnier confines of the MoCA Director’s office, starting June 1st. That leaves SHEPARD FAIREY’s upcoming portrait show as the farewell exhibition at one of the city’s most legendary and influential commercial art institutions in the city’s history.

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UKRAINE///FIRST LOOK: DAMIEN HIRST’S “REQUIEM” CAREER RETROSPECTIVE AT THE PINCHUK ART CENTER

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Last weekend saw the DAMIEN HIRST’s first grand spectacle of 2009 when his daunting career retrospective “Requiem” opened at the PINCHUK ART CENTER in the unlikely city of Kiev, Ukraine. Not exactly known as an epicenter of fine art (unless you count the Ukrainian girls, that is), resident steel billionaire and obsessed Hirst collector VICTOR PINCHUK aims to change that by launching the epic visual spectacle that includes over 100 works (a vast amount of which came from Pinchuk’s private collection) by the British artist from 1998 – 2008 in his own privately funded art palace that holds the title as the largest private museum in the former Soviet Union. The fact that this grandiose show of power comes at a time when…

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NEWS///RIP///IN LOVING MEMORY OF PHOTOGRAPHER SHAWN MORTENSEN 1966—2009

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It is truly with a heavy heart that we must break the news that one of Supertouch’s dear friends, photographer SHAWN MORTENSEN, passed away last nite. A kinetic force of optimism and seemingly limitless positive energy, Shawn’s hearty career as a photojournalist and artist took him around the world several times over, unselfishly spreading his endless supply of good vibes as he went. Particularly renowned for his portraits of musicians, artists, and entertainers, Shawn photographed a stunning array of pop culture demigods in his 20+ year career including…

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BEVERLY HILLS///JOHN WATERS BRINGS “REAR PROJECTION” TO HOLLYWOOD

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As a director of some of the most acclaimed highbrow B-movies of all time, Supertouch amigo JOHN WATERS needs no further introduction. Quietly working the night shift as a fine artist for years now, the Baltimore-bound obsessive’s hard work has finally landed him a spot in the most hallowed hall of the modern art world, namely, the GAGOSIAN GALLERY, where the artist’s solo “Rear Projection” show opened to a throng of Hollywood players, weirdos, fanboys and girls, and well-wishing lookie-loos on Saturday nite. Comprised largely of C-prints of photos Waters has taken of TV screens bearing his favorite stills from movies of all kinds, the works pulse with the raw humor and dry wit that is Waters’ hallmark…

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