Chris Stain’s NYC Rooftop in LA

Chris Stain Carmichael

Next week at the Carmichael Gallery in LA, Chris Stain’s solo show “Up on the roof countin’ pigeons” will open. Open to the public February 6-26th, the show will have originals from Chris Stain as well as a print.

For Up on the roof countin’ pigeons, Chris Stain will transform the gallery into a NYC rooftop scene, complete with pigeon coop and live jazz music. The enigmatic stencil portraits integrated into the large-scale installation pierce the gaze of viewers and offer a unique perspective of contemporary inner city life.

Chris Stain kids cutout

Sounds like it will be a fun show.

Herakut Speaking at Phillips de Pury

Just got this news today which is very exciting for Herakut fans. The German duo will be at Phillips de Pury in March to present and discuss their work. All the info below. Hope to see you there.

Herakut Phillips Presentation

14th March

Phillips de Pury & Company – Saturday Sale

AUCTION March 14th 12 pm

VIEWING March 10th – 12th

RECEPTION March 10th 6-8pm

At the sale’s opening reception on March 10 Herakut will display four works on canvas showing the level of completion of a single piece. The artists will be in the gallery to discuss their work and present their unique piece “YOU SURE?” made especially to benefit the charity War Child. The piece provides a fantastic opportunity for the public to acquire a unique work of art while contributing to an important organization: War Child, an international charity that aims to protect children living in the world’s most dangerous war zones.

“I am extremely grateful that Herakut have chosen to support War Child in this fantastic way. War Child has a strong history of support from the art world and we’re pleased this can continue with such talented and original artists. The support of Saturday@Phillips for this project has also been outstanding. The auction on this piece will raise vital funds for our work with some of the most marginalized children affected by war”. Mark Waddington, CEO War Child.

Herakut – You Sure? 2009

eEstimate £3,000-4,000

Finally: The Q&A with Veng

Veng Canvas

Since Vandalog started 100-some days ago, I’ve mentioned Veng four times. Why is that? It’s not just because I have nothing to talk about. It’s because one, I wanted to feature him and his crew, Robots Will Kill; two, Andrew Michael Ford from Ad Hoc Art mentioned them as well when he spoke about great street artists in NYC; three, Veng knows New York graffiti and street art, so he was part of my Great in ’08 series; and four, he was recently had some work in the From The Streets of Brooklyn exhibition at Thinkspace Art Gallery. But mostly, it’s because he’d good at what he does.

Veng is one of those artists blurring the line between street art and graffiti. I’ve been looking forward to this interview for a while. I think Veng is one of the most important artists to be watching in 2009, and I had to make sure Vandalog readers get to know him. Sorry if I sound like a bit over-enthusiastic, but it’s rare to find an artist of such talent who is not very well known outside of his home town.

I would try to describe Veng’s work, but he does a much better job, so I’ll just get to the Q&A.

RJ: How long have you been painting, graffiti/street art or otherwise?
Veng: I have been painting and drawing since I was little kid, and got into graffiti around the age of 12.

Veng Painting

RJ: Why do you paint on the street?
Veng: For me painting on the street is in the excitement that each time you go out it’s different from the last time. The people you can meet while out painting or pasting can give you opportunities for stories I normally never would have had if all my time was just spent traditionally in a studio. Also the architecture of a city and how it gives you countless surfaces to place your work within is also a draw. Continue reading “Finally: The Q&A with Veng”

Sweet Toof in Hackney Wick

Hackney Wick seems like London’s new graffiti headquarters. Hopefully I’ll be checking it out next weekend or the week after when I’ll take plenty of photos. In the mean time, Unusualimage has found a great piece by Sweet Toof and Gold Peg in Hackney Wick, so here’s a little taste of the area.

Photo by unusualimage
Photo by unusualimage

Street Art Versus Rothko

I’ve got to be honest. I spent about 40 minutes today at the Mark Rothko exhibit at the Tate Modern. I also spent 2-3 hours wandering around East London showing my parents’ friends some street art. You know what I liked more? The street art.

I like plenty of non street art artwork. The other day I saw my first Bruegel in person and loved it. So although I like a lot of street art, I don’t not love Rothko’s work just because he isn’t street art.

The reason I didn’t like the Rothko exhibit as much is because it takes an hour to get something out of most of that work. And even then, you’re just completely guessing. One of my friends, who really enjoyed the exhibit by the way, said “well I think this one’s about depression.” I asked why, and she told me “Well he was depressed at the end of his life and I think this was a later work.” So really, she had no idea if the piece was about depression or how he enjoyed reading the newspaper or nothing at all. At least, she couldn’t gather any of that information from the piece itself.

Rothko was clearly a very talented painter, I just wished he’d painted a thing or even just something abstract with more to it than a square or two with really great brush strokes and technique.

Now, I like Aakash Nihalani’s work taping cubes in New York, because it forces us to think differently. Rothko on the other hand painted things that would look really good in a resturant or hotel lobby. They are would be good bits of background. He does have a few pieces that I think surpass what I’m saying up him, but I still can’t see why Rothko deserves such a large exhibit at the Tate Modern.

After Rothko, I went took my parents (who know a fair deal about street art) and their four friends (who knew nothing about street art) on a walk walk around Shoreditch. They loved it. In fact, one of them half jokingly said that they should have just skipped visiting the V&A yesterday because they could have gotten just as good of an exhibit walking around town.

Bortusk Leer Shoreditch

Clearly, art is out of touch with the real world. Normal people, educated or otherwise, identify far more with one of Bortusk Leer’s monsters than what’s hanging in the Tate Modern.

Earlier this week, my english teacher defined what he thought it meant for a work to be literary. You have to get more from it as you read/view it more. Maybe that won’t be true of all street art, but I’m not sure it is true of much of the Rothko work I saw, and it certainly is true of some street art. Take Faile or Swoon. I get more from their work each time I see it.

Hopefully this makes some sense. I really wanted to go to the Tate Modern today and love Rothko. I didn’t. I paid £10 for an experience of lower quality than what I got for free an hour later. The whole experience makes me think that maybe I don’t want to see street art in the Tate Modern. It seems like they don’t see their job as being accessible to the public, but that is the job of street art.

URB.com Video Interview with Futura

While I was surfing around YouTube today, I found this 2-part interview with URB.com and Futura from back in October. Looks like not too many people have seen it though. If you like Futura, you should definitely check these out:

The Definitive Imminent Disaster Interview

Photo by C-Monster
Photo by C-Monster

New York street artist Imminent Disaster recently did an interview with Commandax, and I have to say it’s 10x more detailed and better than 99% of interviews with street artists. Anybody who likes Imminent Disaster should read it, and if you don’t know who she is, you’ll probably like her by the end of the interview.

My favorite little factoid from the interview: Imminent Disaster once played Janet in The Rocky Horror Show.

Photo by dumbonyc
Photo by dumbonyc

Via Sour Harvest

Photos by C-Monster and dumbonyc

Aren’t Best Ever are Really Good?

Remember that piece last Halloween by Best Ever? It was on Leake Street, and a picture went around on the street art blogs because everybody loved it? Well, Best Ever (a collaboration between Hadley Newman and Neil Edward) has been doing some more work, and it’s just as impressive as that first piece we saw on Leake Street.

They also started a website for their work recently, which is worth bookmarking.

At MuTATE Britain
At MuTATE Britain

More images after the jump… Continue reading “Aren’t Best Ever are Really Good?”

3 Reasons A Recession Is Good For Street Art

Work by K-Guy. Photo by K-Guy
Work by K-Guy. Photo by K-Guy

Everybody’s been talking about how the recession is going to destroy every part of our economy, and yeah, it probably will, but it’s not all bad new… street art might actually get a boost in the long run thanks to this economic downturn.

Here are three possible advantages for street art in this recession:

1. The not very talented artists who have found their way into galleries are going to be put in their place.
So many people have been buying street art either for the name of the artist, or just because it is street art. This year, some collectors are concerned that even great artists won’t sell much work. People have stopped buying for name or genre recognition. Collectors are buying those “special pieces” that they feel are particularly great. At the end of this recession, there are going to be a lot fewer crap street artists because their work  is going to stop selling. Nobody wants to buy a piece any more just because the Sotheby’s catalog describes it as “stencil and spray paint on found wood.” Continue reading “3 Reasons A Recession Is Good For Street Art”