Thursday 2 December 2010

Wednesday 1 December 2010

KAWS EXHIBITION

Visited this exhibition at the Aldrich contemporary art gallery in Connecticut.



This first solo museum exhibition of the work of Brooklyn-based artist and designer Brian Donnelly, a.k.a. KAWS, includes his most recent paintings, sculptures, and drawings, as well as a survey of his iconic street art, apparel, product and graphic designs.
KAWS’s first aesthetic influences came from skateboarding, as did his familiarity with New York City. Around 1991, he started marking his name in different areas of New Jersey and Manhattan. By the time he finished high school, he was mostly focused on graffiti and started intervening on advertising billboards. While exploring new strategies and locations for his work, he obtained a tool for opening bus shelter advertisement boxes. This allowed KAWS to seize the posters, integrate his work, and then replace them. He added an inflated skull with crossed bones and X-ed-out eyes; sometimes the skull was part of a serpentine-looking body that wrapped around the models, a blend that was humorous and daring. Word got around, and when it came to the point where the posters were pulled down and collected almost as soon as KAWS had replaced them, he decided to move on. Next he channeled his creativity into his studio practice, as well as products he developed and distributed on his own and in his boutique in Tokyo, OriginalFake, in partnership with Medicom Toy.
Most recently, KAWS has been exhibiting the art he has been making as a daily practice for some time. His new paintings and sculptures reflect the wit, irreverence, and even affection that he inflicts upon the infamous and iconic entertainment and marketing characters that he loves/hates. KAWS’s characters are highly charged, humorous and yet bittersweet. Although they are recognizable by and accessible to everyone, ultimately they both serve and criticize contemporary consumer culture.

-Mónica Ramírez-Montagut, curator






















KAWS Museum Exhibit Opening from Paper Fortress on Vimeo.



http://www.aldrichart.org/exhibitions/kaws.php

TRIBE

WHAT YOU TALKIN ABOUT!!!!!

R.I.P LESLIE NEILSON

NEW ADELE

ADELE - Rolling In The Deep - In Studio from DUKOFF on Vimeo.

Friday 29 October 2010

Thursday 28 October 2010

Tuesday 26 October 2010

Saturday 16 October 2010

EASTBOUND AND DOWN

Really late on this,but how good is KENNY "FUCKIN" POWERS???????


OOOHHHHH!!!

Friday 8 October 2010

Tuesday 5 October 2010

Monday 4 October 2010

HOUSE!!!!

ITS A GREY DAY











WINTER IS COMING!!!!

PASSING THROUGH

Brian Donnelly, more commonly known as KAWS, has become one of our culture’s most storied artists and designers. From his graffiti roots and re-appropriation of art in public spaces, the New-York based creative took a slow and calculated route towards his work. With increasingly large projects under his belt in a more mainstream realm, he has still maintained a notable degree of humbleness through it all. While most of his public image may be that of a serious individual, beneath it all lies a truly interesting and fun personality who has come to make his mark through painting, fashion and toys.

In his recent exhibition in Hong Kong titled “Passing Through”, he unveiled a massive 5 meter version of his popular Companion character, as well as showing a collection of all-new artwork.











How long ago did you start planning and working on the “Passing Through” show?

I think we really started working on it about 4 or 5 months ago. We were talking before extensively but the real work of taking drawings and going into production was around then.

Was there a reason you picked the Companion sculpture in the particular sitting pose and having his face in his hands?

The Companion is one of my main characters that I like to do in many different ways. I thought with this being the first time I had an opportunity to do something on such a large scale it seemed right to use him. I don’t really think of him as a ‘proud’ character, so the face in the hands was a fitting pose. In our initial discussions I was told that the height was restricted to 5 meters, which I later found out was due to building restrictions. So having the sitting pose, it gives you the impression that the Companion is much larger.

Were the works of art displayed within the exhibition space created especially for the “Passing Through” exhibition?

The Companion sculpture was the main focus for the show. The exhibition space was more for the toys as I figured the demographic would probably be a younger crowd. But for the cloud drawings, I don’t usually do them. But with the concept of “Passing Through” and things happening momentarily, I thought it was an appropriate theme.

Seeing as this Companion is your largest work to date, was there a particular reason why you chose Hong Kong or why you felt it was a suitable location for this sort of project?

I think Hong Kong chose me. [laughs] It was the concept of SK (of AllRightsReserved) to put this project together. It just happened to be here in Hong Kong and I think it’s a perfect fit. My first trip to Hong Kong was in the late 90s and it was around the same time as the development of the Companion character.

The whole concept of “Passing Through” is to present art in an easily accessible format for the public. A way to share it with everybody you could say. What sort of satisfaction do you get knowing your art will be seen by a greater audience rather than say your work only hanging in somebody’s home?

There’s way more satisfaction knowing I’ll reach people in a way similar to my beginnings as an artist. 99% of the people seeing the sculpture will probably do so randomly rather than deliberately coming to check it out. I think that’s the best way of communicating and hopefully I can reach out to others to explore my other work.

If you go further, do you find a different feeling when creating both authorized/commissioned works such as this project versus random art you did in the past such as switching up posters in bus shelters?

Fundamentally it’s the same. But working with SK, they didn’t put up any real restrictions on my work. They allowed me to make the work I wanted to make. But looking back at the advertisements, it was roughly in a similar manner of trying to show my work, I just wasn’t given an invitation such as this.

Are there things you miss doing now that you simply can’t engage in based on your profile and popularity?

Absolutely, for me to do posters or put up advertisements they would be stolen and put up on eBay in a minute. The reason I did that in the past was for communication and reaching people. But now that it’s gone, other opportunities have filled its place.

When you approach your art many of them begin as two-dimensional works before making its way into three-dimensional piece. Is that the ultimate goal for your work?

No, I don’t think that’s true. It just depends on what you see. A lot of things that get reported on blogs are toys and have a commercial aspect to them. People looking at those platforms are sometimes looking to buy. I make a lot more paintings than I do toys so that tends to be the final medium.
Do you find that certain concepts are better suited for flat, 2-dimensional pieces?

Yea probably about 90% of my paintings I would say are suited for that, for example the wall I did at The Aldrich. Some things I see and I think about form but others I think about just that flat space.

Are there any other creative platforms you’d like to explore?

No, I’m content with what I’m doing. I feel like I’m just scratching the surface of painting and sculpture. One of my main interests with art when I was younger was that it wasn’t something that you could ever finish and master. You could be an 80 year old dude feeling like you haven’t done a fucking thing.

How do you balance out everything that falls under the KAWS name without earning the title of “sell-out”?

I know I can’t go out and please everybody. I go out and pick projects that fulfill me and fulfill my goals as an artist. If I don’t follow those rules, then I feel lost. I can’t go out thinking “oh that project may make some people unhappy.” I’ve seen people get in to and out of the work, I’m the only person that lives with the work.

What’s the goal of your work then?

Communication.
Looking at your work, how much of the concept or theme is superficial and seen immediately? How much of it is seen within deeper layers?

I would say a lot of the work I do is a reflection of where I’m at in a certain point in time, or how I’m feeling. I can look back and see where I was at in a certain point in time. For me it’s highly personal and I don’t expect to translate visually. But I hope that my work has a visceral feeling that evokes emotion.

Who are some artists over the years that have come to inspire you?

Tons, I look at so many different painters from classical to contemporary. Artists such as Peter Saul and H.C. Westermann. I definitely think Jeff Koons is fucking raising the bar more than any artist right now based on his production and the quality of the work he puts out.

If we look at OriginalFake as a brand, how much of it is your personal input versus being an extension of what you represent?

I definitely think that OriginalFake is another extension and outlet for me. As for designing the clothes, cuts and shape, (Tomohiro) Konno of NEXUSVII takes care of most of that. We talk about what kind of stuff we want to put out. It’s definitely a collaborative effort.



interview and pics from hypebeast

Saturday 11 September 2010

TAKASHI MURAKAMI

Taken from the Château de Versailles website a quote from Takashi.


“For a Japanese like me, the Château de Versailles is one of the greatest symbols of Western history. It is the emblem of an ambition for elegance, sophistication and art that most of us can only dream of.
Of course, we are aware that the spark that set fire to the powder of the Revolution came directly from the centre of the building.

But, in many respects, everything is transmitted to us as a fantastic tale coming from a very distant kingdom. Just as French people can find it hard to recreate in their minds an accurate image of the Samurai period, the history of this palace has become diminished for us in reality.

So it is probable that the Versailles of my imagination corresponds to an exaggeration and a transformation in my mind so that it has become a kind of completely separate and unreal world. That is what I have tried to depict in this exhibition.

I am the Cheshire cat that welcomes Alice in Wonderland with its diabolic smile, and chatters away as she wanders around the Château.

With a broad smile I invite you all to discover the wonderland of Versailles.”

Takashi Murakami










Sunday 5 September 2010

Wednesday 1 September 2010

Saturday 28 August 2010

Sunday 22 August 2010