A Continuous Act, Always Repeating

December 28th, 2011

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They call this a Framing Exercise, we call it life. Maybe they call it life, too. To be honest, we don’t even know who “they” is, but they are all out there somewhere. (via)

From The Citrus Report



HowNosm Opening at Known Gallery October 15th

October 13th, 2011

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From the press release: The staid cleanliness of a single-colored surface is a disturbing testament to society’s uniformity and the pressure society places on one to conform.

Such a surface, standing alone and dull, cries out for attention.

Answering its call ‹ and recognizing its potential ‹ HOWNOSM bless the surface with confidence, courage, action, vitality and just a touch of the world’s inevitable darkness and death, transforming it into a truer reflection of both the world around it and their own varied lives.

ACHTUNG! is a collection of pieces that resemble broken mirrors, each filled with messages that are, by turns, sharp-edged, blurred and fast-changing. They serve as a reminder of the need to, and the dangers of failing to, walk alertly through this life.

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Tim Biskup at THIS Los Angeles

October 11th, 2011

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Tim Biskup’s solo exhibition Former State opens this Friday October 14th at THIS Los Angeles and we’re super excited to see this new body of work.

About the exhibit:

Tim Biskup’s new collection of paintings looks strangely familiar. Maybe it’s the unavoidable Biskup-ness of his color palate or the uncomfortable, slightly “off” expressions of his characters. Whatever it is, it is intentional. This exhibition was carefully planned out from the very beginning of it’s conception. Something that skews dramatically from
Biskup’s improvisational past. It’s not like he hasn’t put a lot of thought into his shows (His last NYC show was accompanied by a 60 page book of text.). The difference here is the level of focus. The show is almost entirely made up of large-scale paintings in the artist’s polygonal style. To add another layer of unity, the subjects are a series of small mask-like heads. These are not the carefully produced characters that make up his vast array of vinyl figures, but small, roughy hewn, crudely painted things that the artist sculpted himself. The twist comes from the expert craft and expansive scale of the paintings. To see those spontaneous lumps turned into carefully composed geometric images with months of meticulous paint application going into their creation is quite surreal. The original sculptures will be displayed (and sold) along with the paintings. Thus the title of the show. But the title also refers to the growth that Tim Biskup
has gone through over the last 10 years. Both in his work and in his life. It seemed at one point that we would never see characters popping up in his work again, but now he’s gone back to his roots to re-examine and re-invent his past. What he’s come up with is a refined, elegant and mature version of his former state.

Opening Reception: October 14th, 7-10pm
THIS los angeles
5906 North Figueroa Street
Los Angeles, CA 90042.

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The Onion on Steve Jobs: “Last American Who Knew What The Fuck He Was Doing Dies”

October 11th, 2011

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Well, leave it to The Onion to just top every news report possible about a topic that everyone covered: Steve Jobs.

Steve Jobs, the visionary co-founder of Apple Computers and the only American in the country who had any clue what the fuck he was doing, died Wednesday at the age of 56. “We haven’t just lost a great innovator, leader, and businessman, we’ve literally lost the only person in this country who actually had his shit together and knew what the hell was going on,” a statement from President Barack Obama read in part, adding that Jobs will be remembered both for the life-changing products he created and for the fact that he was able to sit down, think clearly, and execute his ideas—attributes he shared with no other U.S. citizen. “This is a dark time for our country, because the reality is none of the 300 million or so Americans who remain can actually get anything done or make things happen. Those days are over.” Obama added that if anyone could fill the void left by Jobs it would probably be himself, but said that at this point he honestly doesn’t have the slightest notion what he’s doing anymore

From The Citrus Report

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Optimist

September 12th, 2011

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Optimist has been putting in solid, clean, consistent work in multiple cities on multiple continents, for the last ten years plus. He has crisp letters, nice color combinations, and a hand style that is one of the best in the business.  Like a lot of writers he is constantly creating and has been making fine art lately as well.  This work deals with materialism and complex societal issues, as well as collaborations with some really dope bay area writers. Keep an eye this guys work. He is doing some really good things, both inside and out. —Ronnie Wrest/The Citrus Report

Give us some basics.  Where are you from?  What do you write? What is your drink of choice?

I was born in SF. Moved to Oakland when I was like 8 or some shit, then moved back to Frisco when I was 19, then moved to Taiwan when I was 24 then moved back to the states when I was 27 now im in the town again. I write optimist de pop. Drink of choice would have to be a Sierra Nevada pale ale with a lemon in it. Or some Bing Bing juice. It’s my own made up drink. Its iced soju or sake green tea and lemon. Hella good on a hot day. Sounds like a girl’s drink but its bomb.

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Are you normally pretty positive or did you just want to take on a crazy long name?

Ha. No I think Im a pessimist at heart but I try to stay positive so I think that writing optimist everywhere kinda subconsciously helps me stay more positive in life cus right now there are a lot of things going on in the world that are pretty depressing. And I like writing long names its more fun and you can do more with it.

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How long have you been painting?

Been doing the graff thing for around 12 or 13 years now, don’t see myself stopping any time soon unless the world gets really fucked up but in that case I can see myself doing more graffiti cus I feel like when everything is falling apart people are not going to trip off graffiti, they are going to have more important things to worry about like food and water and shelter. So I think that will open up a lot of opportunities for writers in the coming age of the 6th mass extinction.  I have only been painting with a brush and trying to crack this fine art game for around 7 years. But have been drawing and shit since I was a little kid.

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A lot of your work seems really personal.  Is there anything specific you want your work to communicate?

As far as fine art my work right now is not very personal, its all about materialism and capitalism destroying our planet and the side effects from that. I think I went through a phase in life where all my fine art was personal because I was subconsciously trying to work through some shit. Like issues I had with my family and myself. But I feel like Im passed that and enjoy moving on to more important subject matters then myself. My graff is personal. I think everybody’s graff is personal. Shit. Im writing my name on the wall. Thats pretty personal. Graffiti helps me keep an open flow of creativity in my life cus its so raw and expressive. Like when im stuck at the studio working on some shit and I get bored or feel like im not getting anywhere I always go out and do graffiti by myself or with a hommie. Cus there is not much thought involved besides not getting caught and making it look good. Its like whatever happens happens and when its done its done and then its gonna get buffed and its over.

There is no pressure with graff.unlike fine art.  Sometimes I feel like graffiti doesn’t matter because it’s so expendable and impermanent and I like that. And fine art matters more??? Cus its for sale??? No.  But it matters more cus its going to last longer and it takes way more time and thought.

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Your delivery truck paintings really bring a cool play on illegal work to your canvas.  Do you think there is a place for graffiti inside of the gallery?

Yes and no. I think there is a place for “graffiti style art” in galleries, but not raw graffiti. If people actually start paying thousands of dollars for graffiti in galleries I will be shocked and somewhat pissed off. I like the fact that graffiti is not for sale, and it’s always attached to somebody else property. So if you wanted to buy it you would have to buy the whole building. Graffiti inside a gallery is not really graffiti to me. Cus it’s not illegal and it’s for sale. Graffiti has got its foot in the door in the fine art world these days more then ever before. There is so much graffiti influenced art out there selling for dumb paper. And alot of these people making this art never really got into the graff game. They went to art school and met some writers and started writing for a few years. Then finished school and became some fine artist doing characters and hella back outlined shit on canvass and using spray paint and what not but never really played a part in the graff game. Never contributed to the culture. And now they are getting paid off the culture.

But there are also a bunch of people who actually paid their dues to graffiti and put in major work over the past 10 -20 years and just now are they becoming known to the rest of the world. Or should I say the art world.

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The Internet has really played a huge role in how graffiti has evolved in the last 10 plus years.  Has this been a good or a bad thing in your opinion?

Oh shit. The Internet. Wow. It really has changed the game. It linked the whole world on some graffiti shit. Now you can know who is doing what in any major city in the world and probably find these people as well.  The internet has fueled the flame under graffiti and now its on fire burning world wide. This is a good thing and a bad thing. Its good cus one could probably go online and surf around on some graff or picture sites and find out whos who in what city and contact them and then fly out there and meet up with them and then become friends with them (only cus we both write) then paint with them. Then come home. I say this cus I have done this before. It was a trip. Like you could have fans thousands of miles away these days when 10 years ago they only people who knew about you and your little graffiti world were the kids in your city or your state and maybe some cats in some other states if your doing it real big. Now everybody knows everybody. Its bad cus everybody knows everybody.  There is too much information on the internet about graffiti, I really don’t know the extent to which the government can track or crack any activities on the world wide web but its all pretty scary when you think about how much info is out there.  If the internet did one thing to graffiti, It blew it up.

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What have you been working on lately?

Lately I have been working on a solo show in Oakland ca. Im thinking of titling it man animal and machine. Im working on 8- 10 compositions on brown butcher paper about man animals and machines all fighting for existence on planet earth. And some smaller less complicated drawings on the same subject.

Do you have any shows coming up?

Yeah the one at Old Crow October 8th and a truck show coming to 1 am gallery in SF in January of 2012 (if the world don’t end) and another show at 1 am in October 2012.  And im sure there will be some in between.

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Two artists/writers to look out for this year…

Amuse DE from Chicago, Pemex, Marcus Murray, Payday, Hyde, Leon Loucheur,  Ian Hill, David Jien, Lil Zen Ten, Saym from Taipei, and your boy.

Follow Optimists work at http://timtheoptimist.tumblr.com/

Optimist’s Man Animal and The Machines. Solo show at OLD CROW GALLERY OCT 8th. Oakland CA. 94610.

From The Citrus Report

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Pedro Matos

September 9th, 2011

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James Pawlish talks to Lisbon artist Pedro Matos about his influences, street art, and first solo show in San Francisco entitled,  “Ephemera

JP: Tell me about Pedro Matos as a person and how your personal life, upbringing, and experiences have influenced your art?

PM: I was born in Santarém, Portugal in 1989 and moved to Lisbon one year later. I have lived here ever since. When I was a kid (10 or 11) I got into a lot of “underground” cultures like skateboarding, graffiti, hip hop, punk, etc. Everything was very connected and things were hard to find and learn about, it made everything so special and precious. I started painting when I was about sixteen and I also had the chance to travel a lot more than most people I know. I don’t know in what way it influenced my work, as I have never lived as someone else…it’s hard to recognize what was influential or not, but definitely skateboarding and graffiti were two of the most important ones.

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You mentioned you started painting at sixteen. Who were some of your earliest influences? Is there any one artist that sticks out as having really inspired you?

A lot of artists were great inspirations when I started, you keep discovering new artists and making new connections and it’s super exciting. Some of the ones that I was stoked about since day one and still inspire me today would be, Anthony Lister, Conor Harrington, Barry Mcgee, Shawn Barber, Kaws, etc..and of course, the old masters like Rembrandt, Velazquez, Caravaggio, & Vermeer.

I read in an interview you started out with no formal training. However, you later went on to pursue your BFA only to drop out after three years. With that being said, what are your thoughts about your time in art school?

Waste of time and money.

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So now that your settled back into your studio, how does it feel having just had your first solo show in San Francisco?

It feels amazing. I am so happy to be showing here. I’ve been following the SF art scene for years and a lot of my favorite artists have shown on these same walls. Everyone at White Walls/Shooting Gallery (and the SF art community in general) are amazing people and I am having the time of my life.

While you were in the city, were you able to draw some inspiration from its rich cultural history and many interesting inhabitants?

Oh man…the Tenderloin….

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Your work has a post-graffiti sense of beauty found in decaying and abandoned places. What first attracted you to this recurring visual theme?

I used to do charcoal on paper paste-ups on unoccupied buildings; I didn’t see many of them in SF. But in Lisbon, the city centre has a lot of them. Just Imagine if you had a lot of empty buildings in Union Square and Downtown SF. It doesn’t make sense! Anyway, as I was doing those, I found a beauty in the decaying look of the buildings, and people tagging over them, pasting event posters, ripping them off, the paper aging, etc. Not only did I find it aesthetically beautiful, but I also thought it went very very well with the kind of subject matter and problematics I am questioning in my work. It’s a lot about subjectivity and ephemerality.

Can you describe a little bit about your creative process?

I like to work in a series of several paintings so I can move from one to another while things dry or I am stuck in something that’s not working. I never do studies or previous drawings and I usually start with a background that’s kinda like what an old wall would look like with the decaying look and fading tags. I start adding layers on top of each other with the different things I am using. (Patterns, portraits, words, etc). Once all that is dry there are a few glazings I do to have this “aged look”.

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Are the people in your paintings people you’ve actually encountered in life or do you use photos and other materials as reference?

Both.

I’ve seen many pieces of yours with the now famous Jean-Micheal Basquiat (SAMO) crown painted on them. Do you have a special connection to Basquiat as an artist?

I am a big fan of Basquiat indeed. I read his crowns were a symbol of respect and admiration for other figures he refers in his work, so these can be the same referring to him and the people I paint in my work. But it was very spontaneous the first time I did it, and only a few days later I realized I had done a “basquiat crown”. Then I did a whole series of portraits of homeless people with the crowns above their heads. I don’t do that as much anymore though. It made sense in that specific body of work.

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I know you’ve done some graffiti work on the streets in the past, do you have any plans on making a return?

Yes, there are plans of things I want to do in the street, I am just waiting for the opportunities to be able to perform them. I haven’t been doing the kind of charcoal paste ups I used to, that doesn’t make sense for me anymore.

What are your thoughts about street art and its continuing acceptance by the “high brow” art community?

I think that’s something very delicate and subjective. Any counter-culture that ends up being accepted by the mainstream (or the high brow art world) loses some of it’s initial magic. A lot of people start to get involved with it for the wrong reasons and somehow it loses it’s appeal. On the other hand, the kind of acceptance and money that came to “street art” allows for a lot of new things and big projects; murals, museum shows, etc Plus, it gives artists the opportunity to show their work.

What are some upcoming projects you have planned?

I’m Moving to a new country and starting to work on my next solo show. I am also releasing a new print in the next few weeks.

What’s one word that describes Pedro Matos?

Indescribable

Pedro’s show “Ephemera” can be seen at Shooting Gallery September 3rd – 24th 2011
http://www.pedromatos.org/

From The Citrus Report

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Jessie Small

September 1st, 2011

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Jesse Small creates art work that is a unique combination of bright, fresh, contemporary ideas that hold a rich history in both form and in media.  Some of his work encroaches on realms of design that he has vowed to take back for contemporary art, while some merge craft and utilitarian objects with technology and modern concepts in ways that challenge preconceived notions of these items.  But no matter what the concept behind any particular piece, Jesse’s work is always a masterful display of manufacturing and laborious craftsmanship that goes unrivaled.  —Ronnie Wrest / The Citrus Report


Ronnie Wrest: You recently set up a studio in Los Angeles.  Is it nice to be back in southern California?

Jessie Small: I am constantly responding to messages the world sends me via mundane, daily life.  For example, I created a series of figurines in Jingdezhen, China, inspired by the public-bus-muse.  In France, I got an idea for an infinite porcelain chandelier from a hall of mirrors in the Nice city hall.  Putting myself in foreign environments creates a lot more messages each day than I get now in LA, probably because of the shift in the flavor of the mundane.  Is the function of my studio in LA to collect all these experiences and give myself a base to produce them?  I never looked at working that way before.  I’d rather collaborate with my circumstances than control them.  My work delves into both antiquity and anti-antiquity, into the past and the future.  LA is sort of crushed into a very bright singularity in the Now.  If I get embraced here, it will be through mutual misunderstanding.  There was recently a fire in my studio which trashed a lot of new work, so I am feeling very un-here at the moment.  Fire can be very cleansing too, just as the ancients assure us, possibly meta-regenerative.

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You lived and worked in China for a few years.  Can you talk about this experience and how it impacted your work and your life?

Well, it helped me digest and purge western culture somewhat.  Last month I visited the Royal College of Art in London and they killed me with that research-then-modify tactic.  It reminded me of when I was coming out of Grad School, on the verge of China. I was just another product of western art school curricula. Referring to art historical figures living or dead in order to put ones own work into context never felt right to me… isnt the world at large where art is happening?  Could art just be a thing first, then become art later?

Audience is everything to me, the final stage of meaning, and when I operated within Chinese society, I and audience were free from assumption and understanding.  This new found freedom from cultural start-points (which usually become endpoints in a nanosecond) was poisonous because it stemmed from ignorance, though it only slayed the dull and dying theories I had dragged in from the west. I lived for 6 months in Jingdezhen, and then 6 months in Shenzhen.  I made many trips by bus and train to the toy-manufacturing capital of the known universe, Shantou, on a goose chase for god’s toy maker, who I joined and worked with.

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Living in China, I found my people, who made things and sold them, like me. I designed an egg-shaped mobile phone, cut a chinese army jeep into lace using an ancient plasma cutter, shared quarters with semi wild dogs, and gleefully used 300 year old public toilets.  I walked through and in many cases spent days, weeks, or months working in dozens of workshops and factories. The strangest thing was coming back.  My sense of value was completely obliterated, mainly because I had seen the squalid conditions from which our merchandise is born.  I am a terrible consumer now.  The Chinese thrifty DIY techniques are what I do instead (within reason of course, after all, I’m a Diva.)

In the past few years you have been working with metals and plastics.  What brought about your interest in these mediums?

Steel probably comes closest to the unreal, fabulous notion of drawing-in-space.  n 1998 I found a stash of old metal army helmets at a family run scrapyard in KC.  These were the genesis of what would become a library of sculptures, using a torch and then a plasma cutter to treat steel like paper.  To find the lace in the steel.  The helmets became unique, beautiful, and useless.  I saw the flow of vandalism and decoration going both ways, like a tide, depending on what direction I ran the film.

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I continue to work with steel, sometimes in a state of overwhelmed rapture.  It is the nectar of Mars, my home planet and muse to which I always return.  Being made of water, it is transcendental to hold a fire torch and, with the slow motion balet happening in my fingers, hand, and arms, feeling big chunks of iron fall clanking to the Earth, liberating an image or a mess.  I can taste the electricity and the rust, my body is stained and scarred, but I am ever so grateful to be at the feet of Mars.

It’s funny you ask about plastics, because I am now running, screaming.  Audience is everything (to me) and when they speak I listen.  I know well some great theories about working in the void, putting oneself in a fiction that doesn’t script or completely disguises the Audience (like a teaching gig, for example.)  We go into exile to concoct new concepts out of dust and tattered ends… and that isolation is sacred.  Everything returns to my Audience, and I am deeply curious about their response to the gifts I create for them, for that is their rich gift to me.  Their response is the mirror, the mirror is the gateway to truth and the secrets.  If a mirror is made of plastic, you can twist and bend it until it is not a reflection anymore, but a distortion.  A real glass mirror will break when a single lie is thrown at it.  So, yeah, folks hated it.  All the stuff I made of plastic, cant sell any of it.  Plastic does not fit the deeply nostalgic vein of my work, nor does it fit the pantheon of antiquitous fine art materials.  Plastic is to retro to smack of the future.  Who am I to argue with this, having failed every test of a pure heart?  Though I implore endlessly at times with the material gods to break loose of their chains, to be not killed by culture but free from it, they have no power over their captor.  It is not I who will free them, I’ve not the power, and so I say, be gone with you plastic, be gone from this place!!

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Some of the sculptures you create are constantly reoccurring in new ways.  One of my favorites is the porcelain pac-man ghost.  Is there a particular concept that has kept your interest in this object?

Initially the Ghosts were an effort to confront various demonic porcelain figurines in Jingdezhen, China that needed checking.  Traditionally in China, ghosts are considered troublemakers, so there are several common shields against them.  One is that each home should have a porcelain figurine to scare ghosts away. So I created a cute porcelain ghost figurine as a contemporary alternative.    Few people were insulted by my slight to traditional superstition, most people understood the work as conversation between an ancient culture and a young, pop oriented culture.  For me, the insight was not that my work was insulting or humorous, but both, independently communicative globally.

I had broken through the East-West culture barrier with something as generic and mundane as a Pac-Man ghost.  No way I am putting that down.  They are extremely versatile.  When I show them in China, the audience focuses on the western aspects (pop, trend, technology,) and when I show them in the West, the audience focuses on the eastern aspects (porcelain, tradition, craft.)  Very few things can mirror-play like this, so I am still learning from it.  I just finished a series of Terra-Cotta ghosts that are sporting ribbon clusters and sheets for my show in NYC coming up.

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Who are 2 or 3 artists or authors that have inspired you recently?

Lanark by Alasdair Grey.  This is a dark diptych about a young artist, unable to finish anything.

Neuromancer by William Gibson.

“You think that’s air your breathing now?”  -Morpheus.

Dina No. Dina is an artist living and working in Portland, Oregon.  She created my favorite sculpture in the world, which is a mechanical typewriter with the letter blocks replaced by various teeth.  Using carbon copy paper, one can compose sentences of little teeth marks, or ASCII art.

You have some graffiti in your past.  Was this one of your early art influences?

I think of myself as having attended, thus far, three schools of aesthetic training.  Fine art BFA and MFA, but as an essential prequel, a graffiti habit. The rules and regulations that are present in graffiti law are volumous.  I learned much more about colors and composition from graffiti than art school.  One time some cops were hassling me and a friend at the Venice Breakwater over some cans of paint, and we got into a debate with them. They couldn’t see that we were not territorial, that we wanted to be everywhere.  Everywhere is not a street-corner.  All-city was the phrase.

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Manifestations of Graffiti in modern civilization may be human’s last great gift to the universe, so its fitting that bureaucrats would classify it as an offense.  I got hauled in as a skinny, greasy 17 year old by a cop named Randolf.  Amazing LAPD Officer Randolf.  Came down off a fire escape after bombing some billboards in downtown LA.  4 am.  Guy cuffs me, throws me in the car, and lectures me all the way to the station about Picasso, Matise, Renoir, all the French greats.  Hard to believe right?  It’s true.  He said if I was a few months older I would be going strait to Juvenile hall.  He kept telling me that I had talent, and that I should apply it in a “legal” way.  So, I should say that Graffiti propelled me to art school, from getting arrested by LAPD Officer Randolf, but also by addicting me to the power of visual art, and I am grateful for that.  Most contemporary art doesn’t hold a candle to the extremism and theories that really good Graffiti gushes into the world, everyday, for absolutely free.

Can you touch on how some of your current work still holds on to some of the early graffiti ideals?

Graffiti artists are examining the world quite differently than most pedestrians.  We’re looking for perfect surfaces to write and paint on.  The city is the canvass, but upon closer inspection there are millions of surfaces.  A few of the surfaces are excellent for Graffiti, and become classics.  When Santa Monica put in new bus stops, we would tag the 18″ metal poles that held up the benches.  Great little spots that never got buffed.  We were analyzing and getting excited by much more mundane environmental information than most locals would in their entire lifetime, looking for “spots.”  This method of scanning existent reality is why I am working with forms I find in the world rather than invent new forms. It’s about showing people something that is obvious, using a different light, that they never noticed before.   My favorite artwork is that which jumps out of the mundane, like a trap or a trick.

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Much of your work overlaps into realms of design and utilitarian products.  Do you enjoy pushing these boundaries of what “art” is defined as?

There is a group of contemporary sculptors, my seniors, working within the vein of design and public spaces.  It has been a much needed “craft-check” for the fine art bracket.  Andrea Zittel and Jorge Pardo are some of the bigger fish here.  For me, this movement has been very inspiring, but I consider it excessively cerebral.  We can call it a movement, or an ism, because it has a broad reaching cultural agenda that includes questioning and fomenting class struggle.  Society desperately needs this right now.  In contrast, my use of utilitarian forms is much weaker and less thought out.  I’m unable to imagine a “sculpture” or what we might loath to call a “cool shape” or a “super shape.”  The first thing people reflect back at my work is their pre-existing label for “it,” which turns out to be incorrect, because representation collapses into art.  We label something as art when we think it is art, mainly because none of the pre-existing labels will stick.  Believe me, if we could call it a “door” or a “cup” we would.  And when we call something a door, we do so because we KNOW it is a door.  As such, the art bracket widens as we claim to know less for certain.  Eventually, you reach an infinite library, beautiful and useless.

In truth and real terms I want to say, without  making an intentional slight to designers and architects by trade, that much of the design-flavored fine art happening today has to do with taking control over our territory:  Pushing back against the influx of designers and architects who have seized significant control over the artist’s traditional succor: Public Art Commissions.  Beyond that, their more minor charlatan inroads to the art collectors pocket is equally destructive for us.  As designers and architects take a chunk of the Contemporary Art sector, everyone better be damn sure that artists are going to take back the night, partially or totally… some will never stop until every designer and architect is dead.  I’d like to re-categorize the movement from an “-ism” to a “revolt.”
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You just got home from a show in Limoges, France.  How was that trip and what do you have planed for the rest of this year?

Limoges is the home of the Bernardaud Factories, where amazing porcelain craft has carried on for over 200 years.  It’s deep and inspiring there, I loved it.  The group show was a hit, and the artists who had made the trek got along famously.  Now I think we are all working on proposals to get back into those factories and make some work!  The opening of the exhibit was by a long shot the most fancy party-for-art I have ever attended, generously celebrated, and it was like the whole city was there.  I love being and working in France, they have such a lively curiosity about anything contemporary.  If it doesn’t push borders, they don’t care about it.  I’m like that too, we get along well.

I’ll be working at a residency in Vallauris, France in November-December.  I’ve recently started working with a gallery in Paris, and I’d prefer to make my show for them in France.  Now that I have divested myself of machines and a studio, I’m lighter than I have been in a while.  It’s nice to have gone through a few cycles of studio-residency-studio-school-etc.  Studio always keeps popping in, wanting to ground me and water me.  As part of my counter-insurgency against the influx of Design and Architecture, I will need to acquire their skills.  So, more school might be coming up soon.  I have a few interviews for Public Art projects on the horizon, winning a project could dictate the next location.  Right now, the next stop is NYC at Nancy Hoffman Gallery, September 8th, 6pm.  September 8th, 6:01pm is a mystery to me.

More about Jesse Small at http://www.jessesmall.com/

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Socially Awkward Penguin Strikes Again

August 30th, 2011

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This was our life from age 12 to 15. Now we are sophisticated and ‘High Five’ effortlessly.

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Michael Kershnar

August 29th, 2011

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Pablo de Pinho talks to Bay Area artist Mike Kershnar about his influences, nature, heritage, and the appreciation of Native American aesthetics…

Pablo: Hi Mike. It’s Pablo. What is your background in graffiti, biggest graffiti influences, and how did graffiti change your life?

Kershnar: Hey dude! I grew up in Irvine, California skateboarding, surfing, and playing in the creek. The first graffiti I was exposed to was in Thrasher Magazine. I immediately connected to the punk rock aspect of painting and putting up stickers wherever you wanted especially on ramps and ditches. I also liked the romantic aspect of graff and definitely created a lot of shitty bubble letters of girl’s names in middle school, and wrote all kinds of funny things like Wolverines (inspired by Red Dawn), Carbon 14, Integrity, and Snarf.

Graffiti influences that are inspirational to me are RUB NME for the mentorship, Saber and Twist for the fat cap flares, Giant for cleanliness and bold visual aesthetic, Neck Face for always keeping true to his skater roots, and Shepard for doing his thing. Today in SF I’m always hyped to see Sway, Ryzen, and Chert. In OC, like 10 years ago Justin Abbink did Subject Matter Gallery and I was living in Costa Mesa and I got to see some of the first shows from Retna, Norm, Saber, and those cats which definitely pushed me in a positive way.

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The greatest way graffiti has changed my life is the ever-present knowledge that whatever the visual landscape is, it has the potential to be artfully altered. Like if the intersection of Haight and Ashbury is important to me because of what it represented culturally, then I can make sure there is always a visual reminder of me around.

The other major thing I learned from graff is to not be afraid at all to go big. Big is the same as small. Like an 80 foot wide 20-foot tall wall in Moscow might seem like a daunting task to someone who has only drawn with a pencil on notebook paper. But when I was there as one who spray paints, it was chill to knock it out in a nice afternoon with the homegirl Kino.

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Do you prefer the urban or natural landscape?

Spiritually and aesthetically I prefer nature. I would rather look at the artistry of the Creator rather than artistry of man.  I would rather hear a stream flowing or coyotes howling, than traffic and people cursing. However as part of my spiritual contract, I want to feel like my life makes a positive impact on humanity in some way. I attempt to do this through my visual communications, and I think that comes through most clearly in an urban environment. I love to bike, skate, and walk around SF and feel super connected to the streets and the many tracks that are there.

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What tribe or culture most resonates with your work?

I grew up fully in the Jewish culture, Bar Mitzvah and the works. So my earliest forays into fancy lettering were with the traditional flame topped Hebrew seraphs at Chabad. I have always been most interested in man’s relationship with the mystical, so as I child I began to explore the visual representation of Egyptian deities, and the austere Japanese art forms, and then Native American aesthetics such as Hopi, and Haida. I felt most comfortable both in process and end result with simple patterns, and bold colors, so this is my main modality. The joke when people ask me what tribe my work is from is I say, “Mioni” (My Own).

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What is your favorite medium?

My favorite medium to do art with is spray paint with a fat cap. My favorite fire medium is bowdrill. My favorite medium of others work to appreciate is beadwork on buckskin with abalone.

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What influences you to make art, and what is your art’s purpose?

As I child I felt as if I made covenant with God to always honor nature and spirit in whatever I would do. So my work seeks to connect people to something wild, spiritual, and rooted in love. I feel like if I died and was asked what I did with my life, I would reply “ I sought to share your glory through my adorned uplifting images.” Basically I just lean on the love that created the hummingbirds, owls, and coyotes, and hope that I am making my own unique contribution.

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You make Nuevo-Aboriginal art with modern materials (spraypaint, markers, mops …). Do you think technology has helped or diminished the quality of modern art?

Technology has created different ways to create visual art. But I do think there is no finer artistry than what was created by Native Peoples at the their peaks with stone, bone, and wood technologies. I would rather see a Native Hunters handmade tools and charms than any contemporary painting or drawing.

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Do you think there is a message/link between graffiti and tribal art?

In my mind the impetus to create, is to add ones voice, ones wishes out into physicality. A Navajo woman may weave a rug to express a story, a tradition, a communal history, and her own unique experience as a member of her tribe. I think there are similar deeper themes in the act of putting up a handmade sticker on a newspaper bin.

What is expected for your next show coming up?

I am very excited to have an upcoming show at RVCA in SF. In addition to all the cool people that work there, it is located on the intersection of Haight and Ashbury! My favorite all time artists are Robert Crumb and Rick Griffin and those dudes are associated with the peak of that SF era named after that very place. So with all that mystical inspirational tradition coming at me it’s safe to say I’ll be putting all my passion into the show. There will be a lot of paintings, drawings, multimedia, a short film, two new zines, and a wolf party installation. I just want to make my man Vegan proud. Peace.

http://www.mikekershnar.com/

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Craiglist Ad: “This Coffee Table Saved My Life”

August 14th, 2011

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Who is going to be the one to break it to this guy? This coffee table just isn’t that nice.

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