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Street Project by Dan Witz featured in Huffington Post

DAN WITZ’S BREATHING ROOM
INSTALLS MEDITATING FIGURES IN 10 LONDON PHONE BOOTHS

“It was an insane install,” says Dan Witz of his London phone booth, “probably one of the most challenging of my career.”

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The New York Street Artist who began working anonymously putting art on the streets in the late 1970s is sometimes given to hyperbole, but when you see the map of the ground he covered in the city in search of the right homes for his “Breathing Room” guerilla installations, you think he may be hewing to the truth. He’s also got the timing and delivery of a Catskills comedian when describing his efforts to put up these new people deep inside a spiritual practice.

“All 10 of the pieces are up and scattered nicely around greater London,” he says wide-eyed and nearly out of breath as if he had just finished running an interventionist art marathon. “Greater is the word. That place is huge. Vast. Endless. And it seems like I’ve seen every scruffy inch of it now.”

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“Take my wife, please!” He didn’t actually say that one. Besides, Dan’s wife Tiffaney is the linchpin who helped him realize this project, putting together the video and Kickstarter page that raised money to bring him from New York to glue these paintings to the iconic red phone booths.

As it turns out, these quietly meditating illusionistic figures were measured and created for a size of booth that has fallen into disuse – a fact that he may have liked to know before painted these in his Brooklyn studio. There are two sizes of phone booths in London, Dan tells us; the K2 and the K6.

“The one that I measured for, the K2, is the older, rare and widely dispersed one. Apparently there are only a couple of hundred of them in use at remote and largely undisclosed locations. But, through the deep research skills of Mark Clack of Wood Street Walls and my ever intrepid wife Tiffaney, we were able to locate enough K2’s for me to put my paintings on.”

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Witz’s newest work is meant as a response to the terrorist attacks in many cities that have hurt many people psychologically and stirred an atmosphere of fear – now he hopes to encourage a place for people to create “breathing room” for reflection. He has dealt directly with darker issues before, particularly a well-documented street art campaign a couple of years ago in Frankfurt, Germany, of figures caught just behind dark windows and metal grates. It is a guerrilla style he has honed over years to subtly draw attention and unnerve a passerby, perhaps into action.

For that campaign a nearby QR code could be scanned and followed to the Amnesty International campaign in support of political prisoners. Here he hopes to spark individual acts of hope, with these serene images radiating an optimism and focus on more peaceful matters.

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Mr. Witz says that the whole experience tracking down and installing in London phonebooths was challenging, and fun and rewarding as well. “Fortunately I had the foresight to rent a motorcycle and I figured out how to mount my phone with Google maps on the handlebars,” he says.

“I’m not sure how I would have done any of this without that. But don’t even get me started on how crazy it was to drive on the left side of the road for the first time in my life,” then adds somewhat conspiratorially, “Don’t tell Tiffaney but there were some close calls.”

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Originally featured in the Huffington Post

‘Cluster’ Exhibition Preview

Cluster
at Jonathan LeVine Gallery

Starting on August 3rd at Jonathan LeVine Gallery, some of their established as well as new artists will be presenting work in a new group show. Entitled Cluster, the exhibition gave the participants a chance to interpret the idea of cluster or to arrange a grouping of their work to display. Included on the roster will be Amandine Urruty, Anton Vill, Ben Tolman, Charlie Immer, Drew Leshko, Dylan Egon, Gary Mellon, Gary Taxali, Luke O’Sullivan, Marco Mazzoni, Nicomi Nix Turner, Ron English, Sam Gibbons, Smithe One, Tran Nguyen and Troy Counterman.

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Social Anxiety Disorder by Marco Mazzoni

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The Couple by Troy Coulterman

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The-Brotherhood by Nicomi Nix Turner

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Somewhere Between Now and Then by Tran Nguyen

Smithe-One-Bananos-BarBananos Bar by Smithe One

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Play Slab by Luke O’Sullivan

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Detail of Play Slab by Luke O’Sullivan

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41 by Gary Taxali

Originally featured on Arrested Motion

New Mural by Handiedan in Richmond, VA

Art Whino returned to Richmond, VA on July 11, 2016 for the fifth installment of the Richmond Mural Project.  This year the organization reached their short-term goal of creating 100 murals throughout the city, allowing visitors to see work of differing styles by artists from around the world.

One of this years participants was Handiedan, a Dutch artist who pushes mixed-media collage to a higher level.  Similar to her fine art process, Handiedan’s wheat paste murals are multi-layered, hand-cut collages that have a distinct three-dimensional quality.  Her subjects are classic female pin-ups that she creates digitally using ornamental components such as currencies, sheet music and her own cartoon drawings.  Handiedan’s pin-ups look like something between an adorned femme fatale from a noir film, a sexually joyful pin-up from a 1950’s calendar and a tattooed rockabilly girl.  Each work is a treasure trove of symbols, with a focus on cosmology, Eastern philosophy and sacred geometries.

Below are images of Handiedan creating Luna Cogitationis for the Richmond Mural Project:

Luna Cogitationis
Wheatpaste Mural
Paper on brickstone
49’25” x 39’5″ / 15 x 12 m
Location: S 15th Street x Dock Street, Richmond VA

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Image courtesy of Tost Films

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Image courtesy of Tost Films

 

Andy Kehoe Interview on PRØHBTD

Andy Kehoe Turns Dreams into Fantasies

By David Jenison

“I inhabit my worlds with strange creatures and like many of the subjects in Romantic paintings, they are often dwarfed by the nature surrounding them,” says Andy Kehoe, a Pittsburgh-based artist whose mixed-media works commonly feature animal-human hybrids in dark forests and moody landscapes. While influenced by the 19th century Romanticism movement, Kehoe admits his vivid, other-worldly dreams also inspire the images he paints. The artist’s most recent show, Fantastical Romanticism at the Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York, includes emotive pieces produced using various combinations of oil, acrylic, resin and polymer clay on cradled wood panels. PRØHBTD spoke with Kehoe to learn more.

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What can you tell me about your exhibit at Jonathan LeVine? In what ways did you challenge yourself?

Every show is a challenge unto itself. One of the overarching challenges is to keep evolving and moving forward while maintaining the essence of what initially drew people to your work. Luckily, I feel that I work in a theme and a medium that allows me to keep experimenting and working outside of my comfort zone. Though there are some stressful moments involved in working in this manner, it’s always exciting to jump headlong into uncharted waters and see what comes of out trying something new.

For this show in particular, I had a lot of ideas that felt like they needed room to breathe. I was particularly inspired by the Romantic Period of painting so that meant grandeur and huge emotional impact. That also meant going big… well, big for me. Three feet is big in my book, especially with the resin layers. Beyond the Familiar is the biggest piece I’ve ever done using resin, so I wanted that one to be extra special. I had some more complicated concepts in mind for that piece, but in the end, I went with a pretty simple composition. There’s a lot going on technically, but spatially and in the color scheme, it’s a pretty minimal composition. Of all of the pieces in the show, I was most nervous about that one. It’s a bit of a departure for me in many ways, but I felt like it touched on common themes and possessed the emotional resonance that I hope is prevalent in all my work.

I also wanted to continue to expand my color palette a bit and play around with some color gradients. I’ve been broadening my color scheme with each show, and this show is kind of the culmination of that endeavor. Though withThe Hunter, I wanted to bring back a true Autumnal color palette to harken back to my older work.

Additionally, I wanted to do some straight oil and acrylic paintings again. There are definitely things I miss about doing more traditional paintings, such as the ability to go back and work on the background again. With the resin, once that layer of resin is poured, you can only move forward. Which is both liberating and horrifying. After all these years of doing the resin pieces and working in pronounced layers, I was curious to see how that process would influence my painting process. It really took me a while to get back in the swing of it, but I really enjoyed it. I think I’ll definitely be doing more in the future.

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Do you see your art as a dream, an alternate reality or possibly the future?

I don’t see my work as a dream, but some of my pieces are definitely inspired by my dreams. I love my dreams. I have crazy, amazing dreams. Some of them are straight-up action dreams full of explosions, gun fights and narrow escapes. I’ve had numerous end-of-the-world scenario dreams where something hugely catastrophic occurs, and it’s simultaneously horrifying and awe inspiring. I also have a reoccurring dream where I’m standing on a snowy, barren, stony shore overlooking a vast, empty, silent ocean. It feels as far away as you can get, and I can smell the clean, salty air and feel the crispness of it on my skin. I don’t know what it is or where it is, but it brings me equal measures of placidity and fear of being so far removed from the rest of the world. That specific feeling has definitely made it into my work, but I have yet to attempt the image of it.

Most of all, though, I go on journeys and see strange and wondrous places in my dreams. I always tell my wife that I wish I could record the imagery I see when I dream so I can show her these amazing landscapes and wonders. I want to share the unexplainable emotion that it evokes. In that sense, the best I can do is try to emulate the imagery and the correlating feeling in my work. One work in the show that was directly inspired by my nightly adventures isDreamscape Wanderer. I see this creature as a sort of dream psychopomp that guides me to both familiar and unexplored dreamscapes. The subconscious can be a labyrinthine place, so it’s good to have someone there to help you along.

As for the actual world in my art, I see it as a conflux between many different worlds and realities, and the separation between the different planes of existence is pretty thin. This leads to worlds bleeding into each other and creatures inadvertently crossing over into this world. A multi-universal melting pot of alternate realities with the creatures and cultures that go along with them. There are also ancient creatures that have always lived in this world, as well as creatures that can travel between the worlds.

Our own reality is included in this, which is why you see little bits of human influences scattered around. This is definitely not an alternate version of Earth. Earth is a place where virtually all magic has been stripped from the world, save the traces that can still be found in the minds of more imaginative beings. This other world is a place where the magical and supernatural are unequivocally real, and part of the very fabric of the reality. When humans migrate to this world, they bring the best and worst of humanity with them. They change when exposed to a world infused with magic and, in part, create some of the best and worst aspects of the world. Thus is human nature.

Most of the time the layers of the alternate planes are hidden from view, but there are places where different worlds come into plain sight. In the piece Multiversal Coalescence, the character is overlooking a valley where multiple universes are materializing and converging in a visible way.

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Your art commonly places animals, creatures and human-animal hybrids in natural settings like a forest. What does the forest symbolize for you?

The forest symbolizes so much to me such as mystery, disorder, exploration, discovery and the unknown. It’s been a mythical place throughout our human history, and it’s no different for me. So many of the fairy tales and folk stories I read growing up take place deep in the woods with the dangers and wonders held within.

It’s an uncivilized, organic mess of chaos that exists completely outside our normal measures of control and order. There is a certain power in entering a place that doesn’t adhere to the laws of mankind. The edge of the forest is literally a threshold to a different world, and when you cross that threshold, you are stepping inside a giant living structure.

I’ve always held a certain reverence for the forest. When we were young, my twin brother Ben and I used to run around the woods behind our house any chance we could. We had an amazing stretch of forest to explore full of streams, tree bridges, vines to swing on and lots of critters to observe. It always felt like a sacred place, but one that I didn’t belong to no matter how wild I tried to act. It’s a similar feeling I have when I step into a mosque or a cathedral. All I can do is appreciate the immense beauty and wonder of it because I’ll never truly be a part of it.

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In terms of the characters, what do they say about the line between humans and animals?

Since this is a meeting place of worlds, the line between animals and more humanoid creatures is very vague. Many of the creature’s characteristics are based on where they came from and how they’ve adapted and evolved to the world around them. There are creatures that have always been denizens of this world, and they are the most ancient and beast-like. The characters change the world around them to a degree, but it’s mostly the environment that changes them.

All the creatures grow up and live in this untamed environment, and for the most part, there isn’t the desire to tame and conquer the wilderness. It’s more of a synergistic relationship, especially with the ancient creatures. They are a product of their surroundings, and many of the creatures are comprised of the flora and nature around them. Their environment is part of them in a very literal sense.

A good example of this is the piece Sacred Beast.

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What type of energy does your artwork tap into in terms of the imagination and possibility?

Imagination is paramount for me, and one of my goals is to create a world where anything is possible. For as much as I’ve gone into my reasons for why my world is the way it is, I want to create an energy that inspires the viewer to tap into their own imagination and create their own stories from the imagery I’m providing. The emotional response of the work has always been more important than the specific narrative.

Do you consider your artwork to be dark, and if so, what are the positive aspect of darker themes?

There’s definitely a note of darkness in my work, but I feel like there is a beautiful mystery to darkness. When I think of all the movies and stories that really affected me growing up, they all had dark moments in them. Movies like The NeverEnding Story, The Secret of NIMH, Willy Wonka—that tunnel scene used to scare the crap out of me—The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth all had moments of real dread and consequence in them that simultaneously frightened and fascinated me. I doubt those movies would have stuck with me over all these years without those moments.

Darkness is more complicated and ambiguous in its nature than our very pronounced notions of goodness and uprightness. That in itself makes it undeniably interesting. But in reality, there are very few people and very few actions that are starkly one or the other. I prefer to tow the line with my work, and have dark and light coexisting with each other.

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Is there anything that helps you get outside the present reality when coming up with ideas for your art?

When it comes to brainstorming, I usually retreat to my studio, put on some sort of weird, ambient music in my headphones and stare at the piece I’m working on. This happens at every stage of painting. In the very beginning, I’ll stare at blank panels for inordinate amounts of time until the idea begins to work itself out a bit. There’s something about seeing the working surface that helps me to further visualize the concept… even when that surface is nothing more than blank gesso.

When I get further in the piece, I’ll sit with it again and reassess my starting concept with the current state of the painting. Many times when the world starts coming together, I’ll change up character placement and sometimes change their scale to better fit their environment. Sometimes the original concept changes completely when I imagine something else existing in the environment.

These moments are actually very important to me and my creative process. I try to never be too stringent with a starting concept, and I allow for the concept to grow and change organically as the painting progresses. Working with layers built up with resin slows the whole process down and gives me time for these moments of reflection.

Most of my ideas come out of these sessions, and at this point, I’m not even too sure where my ideas come from anymore. So many of these ideas are very abstract and very much from the subconscious. The piece Nascent Musings of Incorporeal Designs deals with bringing these unformed concepts out of the ether into something tangible.

Originally featured on PRØHBTD

Mana Urban Arts Project: Nychos

In collaboration with Mana Urban Arts Project and Jonathan LeVine Gallery,  Austrian artist Nychos painted a mural at the Ice House, a building located near the approach to the Holland Tunnel in Jersey City. Titled Anatomy of the Empires Eagle, this large-scale piece depicts an eagle and a snake in the artists renowned transparent aesthetic, displaying their insides for all to see.

Nychos recently told PRØHBTD, “Being confronted with the insides of an animal at such early age had a profound effect on me visually. It fascinated me to see how living organisms are built and how different layers make up their body. To me, this has a certain aesthetic value which I like to show with my art…The reactions from people to my art vary. Some people consider what I do scary, but if I watch a kid looking at my art, they are not frightened but really interested in it. That is kinda my approach.”

Mana Urban Arts Project: NYCHOS at The Ice House from Jonathan LeVine Gallery on Vimeo.

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Image courtesy of Karin du Maire

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Image courtesy of Uyen Cao

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Image courtesy of Uyen Cao

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Image courtesy of Karin du Maire

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Image courtesy of Uyen Cao

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Image courtesy of Karin du Maire

Andy Kehoe on The Creator’s Project

These Paintings Take a Fairytale Turn to a Forest Far, Far Away

By Diana Shi

Weaving dreamy landscapes with nymphic animals tucked away in forests, multi-media artist Andy Kehoe’s latest collection of paintings titled Fantastical Romanticism at Jonathan LeVine Gallery spins the Romanticism tradition. An image of a dark forest draws the viewer to walk a little closer, to reach out for a curious hand versus wondering what kind of potential phantom may be lurking. It is a gentle urging rather than a dangerous invitation.

Many paintings feature a small, fantasy creature with unearthly surroundings towering over him, alluding to the scale of traditional Romantic works. The artist writes, “There is always a harmony and symbiosis between the characters and the natural surroundings, with the giant creatures themselves sometimes acting as natural wonders.”

The artist credits an interest in the 19th century Romantic movement as playing part and parcel to his use of nature and dramatic scene-stealing horizons. As Kehoe states, he relishes displaying an aesthetic flush with “individuality, emotion, and drama.”

“Sometimes the creatures are bringing you into the scene with a straight gaze and other times they are facing away so that you can share that contemplative moment with them. […] I love the idea of a living, breathing wonder roaming the landscape.”

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Originally featured on The Creator’s Project 

Saner’s Debut Museum Show in the U.S.

SANER’S RESISTENCIA/RESISTANCE at MUSEO DE LAS AMERICAS

Saner (aka Edgar Flores) delves into the essence of cultural self through nahual masked renegades in this summer’s exhibition at Museo de las Americas.

In the exhibition Saner explores the themes of identity and conformity as he portrays masked personas inspired by traditional nahual spirits. With 48 canvases, a large graffiti mural and one digital creation, Saner’s voice can definitely be heard and with Museo’s full embrace will certainly not be resisted. Saner is very much the product of his environment which can be seen as a direct translation and divergence of his influencers. From pop art to graffiti murals, Jose Posada to Diego Rivera, Saner’s pieces tell his vivid story. Saner’s works begs us to ask the questions: What mask do you wear? What do you resist? What is your cultural identity?

“Edgar Flores (aka. Saner) uses everyday life as the stage to introduce his magic beings full of energy and mischief, always concealing their identity, resisting the conservative mind. Those creatures represent the ideals and aspirations of people struggling for survival. This exhibit celebrates the spirit of our community, our culture, our love for life and the power to resist the taming of our ancient spirit.” —Maruca Salazar, Curator

SANER “RESISTENCIA/RESISTANCE” @ MUSEO DE LAS AMERICAS
Jun 23, 2016 – Sep 16, 2016
Museo de las Americas, Denver

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Originally featured on Juxtapoz

Nychos Interview on Huffington Post

Nychos Slays In New York: IKONS Revealed As Never Before

Jaime Rojo & Steven Harrington (Co-Founders, BrooklynStreetArt.com)

All photographs © Jaime Rojo

“Scientists, psychologists, surgeons … in the end we’re all driven by a similar curiosity.”

This month has been a whirlwind in New York for an Austrian street artist/fine artist/illustrator named Nychos, and he’s made quite the iconic impression. Anchored by a show that opened last weekend of canvasses and illustrations at Jonathan Levine Gallery in Chelsea named “IKON,” and assisted by a co-branded sculptural event with the Vienna Tourist Board, the surreal dissectionist didn’t rest there.

In the weeks leading up to and after these events he also managed to hit a number of walls in Coney Island, Bushwick, and Jersey City. Oh, and he knocked out a box truck as well.

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Nychos. Coney Art Walls 2016. Coney Island. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

In addition to pulling out an astounding sculpture of Sigmund Freud looming over a couch that drew a crowd to the foot of the (also iconic) Flatiron Building at 23rd and 6th in Manhattan, the afterparty and reception featured Dominic Freud, the great grandson of the founder of psychoanalysis, who surmised that if he were alive today he would definitely have wanted to put Nychos on his couch.

Indeed you may wonder about the mind of this sharp-knifed artist who has decided to diverge from the realm of slicing open animals and fantastic creatures to taking apart cultural and pop-cultural icons for his fascinating painted science experiments.

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Nychos. Coney Art Walls 2016. Coney Island. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

With a free hand on the can and rarely a sketch, and an athletic kineticism that verges on dance, this artist is fully in his zone, at times delivering what one important art world figure described to us as a “virtuoso” performance, even when he’s de-boning Ronald McDonald. Among his new subjects on walls and canvas are included such recognizable figures as Batman, Darth Vader, Mickey Mouse, Elvis, Marilyn, Motörhead’s Lemmy, and the Statue of Liberty.

Yes, it is grotesque, and yes, some of these subjects were actual people. Additionally, there is a comical dark side in it’s glossy finish and stylized splash, with perhaps a greater critique of consumerist entertainment culture and more than a touch of sadism. This is the pretty gore that is familiar to an un-shockable generation raised by vampires. You know who you are.

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Nychos. Coney Art Walls 2016. Coney Island. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

We asked the celebritic internist to talk about his work and his prodigious program across NYC and he gave us an inside look at the heart and mind of Nychos.

Brooklyn Street Art: You like to open things up and look inside. Would you consider yourself more of a scientist or psychologist?

Nychos: I consider myself an artist. But yeah, the question is justified. Scientists, psychologists, surgeons … in the end we’re all driven by a similar curiosity.

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Nychos in collaboration with the artist Lauren YS for The Bushwick Collective. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

Usually you depict primarily factual arrangements of organs and systems – but you also include a huge amount of movement and activity and emotion! How do you feel? How does a viewer feel?

People who see me paint often tell me that it’s like watching an entire performance, so you could say the movement is not only in the piece or only me, it’s a synergy of both. I feel like the viewer can recognize these (e)motions in the finished piece as well.

Is this work intellectual or emotional? Or both?

Both. In my eyes, a creative process always includes intellectual and emotional content. Both aspects are fuelling each other. At least that’s what I see in my work.

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Nychos in collaboration with the artist Lauren YS for The Bushwick Collective. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

We associate your work with the animal kingdom, but you are slicing Sigmund Freud open here in New York – What will we all be studying?

I’d suggest you tell me afterwards. I can only say that “Dissection of Sigmund Freud” and my exhibition “IKON” at Jonathan Levine Gallery are a good way to announce that I’m going to set a focus on human anatomy in the future.

Does Ronald McDonald actually eat his own food or is mostly whole grains and salads and fresh wheat-grass juice.

Good question. I’m gonna ask him when I see him next time.

OneTeas, Ron English and Banksy have all bashed McDonald’s a number of times with their work – why is that brand so hateable?

Well, I’d say McDonald’s is just the embodiment of all these fast food chains, so the criticism does not only refer to this specific brand, but to all of them. McDonald’s just made a damn good job with burning this weird clown into our brains and with it the bitter taste of today’s dining culture.

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Nychos. A drone surveying the progress of the mural at The Bushwick Collective. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. The Bushwick Collective. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. The Bushwick Collective. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. The Bushwick Collective. Brooklyn, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. “Dissection of Sigmund Freud”. Vienna Therapy. Manhattan, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. “Dissection of Sigmund Freud”. Vienna Therapy. Manhattan, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. “Dissection of Sigmund Freud”. Vienna Therapy. Manhattan, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. “Dissection of Sigmund Freud”. Pictured here with Jonathan LeVine. Vienna Therapy. Manhattan, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. “Dissection of Sigmund Freud”. Vienna Therapy. Manhattan, NY. June 2016

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Nychos. “IKON”. Jonathan LeVine Galler. Manhattan, NYC

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Nychos. “IKON”. Jonathan LeVine Galler. Manhattan, NYC

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Nychos. “IKON”. Jonathan LeVine Galler. Manhattan, NYC

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Nychos. “IKON”. Jonathan LeVine Galler. Manhattan, NYC

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Nychos. “IKON”. Jonathan LeVine Galler. Manhattan, NYC.

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Nychos for Green Villain. Jersey City, NJ

Originally featured on The Huffington Post

Andrew Hem Interview on PRØHBTD

Cambodian Expat Andrew Hem on Painting Real Life

By David Jenison

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Andrew Hem is an artist with one hell of a history. The Khmer Rouge, led by notorious leaders like Pol Pot, ruled Cambodia in the 1970s and orchestrated a genocide that killed off a quarter of the country. The Oscar-winning film The Killing Fields famously depicted these atrocities in 1984. Against this backdrop, Hem’s parents fled Cambodia, giving birth to Andrew along the way. The Cambodian-born artist came to reside in California where he eventually delved into graffiti and fine art.

Hem recently debuted his latest solo exhibition, Mountain Full (on view through June 11), at the Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York City. Inspired by a dream world free from superficial judgments, Hem captured artistic snapshots depicting colorful characters set against dramatic backdrops and landscapes. PRØHBTD spoke with Hem to learn more about his family, his artwork and returning to Cambodia for the first time as an adult.

Tell me about the world you create through art and how it differs from reality.

I am such a kid when creating paintings. I love ninjas, anime and superheroes movies so it’s going to be obvious that I include those things from time to time. The world in which I live looks like a 19th-century still life. I would paint it, but I feel like it’s already been done, and it could become boring.

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Mountain Full has been described as snapshots of a dream. When you created these pieces, do you first imagine the full narrative of the dream, and if so, what guided you to the specific snapshot you wanted to capture?
I travel to most places that I paint. After visiting certain places, the moment and location sticks in my head when I’m day dreaming. The ideas come when I least expect it, often times when I drive or eat. It’s like an image that stays with you and will only disappear when you paint it.

Your father was an art teacher in Thailand. What were some of the foundational lessons he taught you about art at an early age?

My dad painted constantly. I would come home from school, and my school books were filled with drawings. He would get me in trouble for drawing on library books! When I was younger, I got so mad at him for doing that. Now I realize he couldn’t help it because I’m the same way now. That’s one thing I learned from him at an early age: Draw on anything when you feel the urge to.

After your family escaped Cambodia, you did not return until you were an adult. As you reconnected with the culture in Cambodia, what stood out to you?

How beautiful the country was. My favorite place was visiting my dad’s village. It is a small town where everyone just farmed. I would get lost, and old ladies would come up to me and ask if I remembered them. A few even said we went to school together. That’s when I realized they thought I was my dad! It was an amazing experience to visit where my parents grew up.

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What did you think about the art in Cambodia, both in terms of new artists and ancient marvels such as Angkor Wat?

Everybody in Cambodia paints the same way. It’s the same way in most counties. All the paintings of Angkor Wat look like they were done by the same person. The last time I visited Cambodia, I took my watercolor set and started to paint outside. I would hear people say, “What kind of tree is that?” I learned how to paint landscapes looking at Edgar Payne. It was a totally different style from what they are used to. I like the style, I just wish a few more would rebel and go in a different direction.

Tell me about the role graffiti had in developing your current style and connecting with an artistic social circle?

Graffiti helped me early on by helping me develop my work ethic. When I did graffiti, I went out every weekend trying to get the most out of my weekends. Now that I am a full-time painter, I carry on the same mentality. It’s all about being productive.

You spent four days in county jail for putting up graffiti art on an abandoned building in San Francisco. What are the negative, long-term effects that can happen when cities criminalize graffiti and charge artists with felonies?

I am not really sure about the negatives, but I do know about the positives. Being in jail for the short amount of time was a huge wake up call for me. I wouldn’t be where I’m at if I hadn’t gotten arrested. And the same thing goes for most of my friends. None of my friends spent time and came out thinking about places to paint.

Originally featured on PRØHBTD 

Mural by Faith47 in United Kingdom

722 – 481 BC is the newest collaborative work from Faith47 and Lyall Sprong of Thingking.  This large mural is situated in the heart of Manchester’s northern district and pays homage to human intimacy, as well as asserts support for LGBT rights.  At night this public work is brought to life by a beautiful geometric light installation

This artwork is part of the Cities of Hope Mural Project in which the work of each artist is matched to a local grassroots organization. Faiths artwork serves as a potential catalyst for a dialogue between the Partisan collective in Manchester and the Triangle Project based in South Africa.  The piece is also art of Faiths ongoing series, 7.83hz. “Relationships rise and fall, societies blossom and crumble,” staes the artist.  “The profound connectedness between us creates and destroys life. We are sensitive and caring, yet at the same time vulnerable and cruel.  The foundation of the 7.83hz project is recognizing this duality as well as the profound weight of our interconnectedness.”

All images and video courtesy of Zane Meyer of @chopemdownfilms

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New Interview with Mike Leavitt

Auteurs Turned Action Figures: An Interview with Mike Leavitt

It’s not often you get to see an art exhibit that’s an equally measured melding of pop culture, wit-heavy satire, surrealism and impressive skill. But that’s what Mike Leavitt, also known as ReMike, is all about. The Seattle-based artist started out by making evolved action figures more than a decade ago. Now his small-scale creations are known for treading the line between high art and playful fun. You also might have seen his on-point rendition of Bernie Sanders, commissioned by friends of his at a Brooklyn toy company.

Now his latest collection, King Cuts, is on display at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York City through June 11 (his third solo exhibit for the gallery). It features 16 famed film directors, cheekily referred to as the “best directors ever carved in wood.” Film buffs could make a drinking game out of spotting the myriad of film references effortlessly worked into each character. (Look for a whopping eight various film references on Wes Anderson.) I had the pleasure of meeting Mike at the gallery in Chelsea to talk about the project. It was a bonus to be there when the gallery manager interrupted to tell him Spike Lee had just called because he was interested in buying the totem in his likeness and was en route. It had already sold, but needless to say, Mike had no reservations about creating another one for the director.

Leavitt group

So, the subtitle for this exhibit called the group the “best directors ever.” Is that kind of tongue-in-cheek?

Definitely, along with the “carved in wood” bit. I’m just trying to start a dialogue. To say anybody is the best at anything—nobody is ever going to agree, especially in movies and music. Music even more so.

When it comes to movies and the idea of auteurs, once a director has amassed this big body of work, people kind of accept it. That doesn’t necessarily happen with music.

People take music really personally and get so attached to it. People take ownership over it.

Why reimagine directors as opposed to, say, rock stars?

I’m looking for visual material to start with, and I knew if I started going down this path, there’d be a lot of iconography to work with. Music’s trickier. Rock stars create their own cult of personality. That was another reason I like this idea. I hadn’t really seen these guys represented in that form.

Usually we associate directors with staying behind the scenes.

And I think that’s kind of become some of my shtick for a while. Since I’m good at sculpting the likeness of a face, it gets interesting when it’s a face maybe you wouldn’t recognize off the bat, but you know who it is. You know that person’s work. It’s the face behind the mask, the person behind the camera, the wizard behind the curtain.

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Spike Lee visiting the gallery to check out his sculpture

And then there’s the satirical element that you impart.

Yeah, I’m kind of a prankster. A lot of these guys I really love, too, so I’m making fun of them and paying homage at the same time.

I’d think you wouldn’t be spending the time if you didn’t have some degree of respect for the subject.

It’s either respect for their talent or work or respecting the fact that they’re a phenomenon, by their control or not. It’s like, “There’s something going on. This deserves to be made fun of or have a moment.”

Do you have a favorite director?

I definitely like [Stanley] Kubrick’s movies. I love Star Wars—I grew up with it. I wouldn’t say those are the best movies ever made, but I have a nostalgic attachment. Wes Anderson, I really like.

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What was the process like before you started carving? Did you watch a lot of movies?

Yes, I did a lot of research. Well, “research”—I watched movies.

Hey, work is work!

There were a lot of movies I hadn’t seen. Like I had never watched The Godfather, which is weird. It’s such an iconic movie and something I had to do for this show, so that was a great excuse to watch it. A lot of my work is about trying to do a parody of pop culture, but it’s also about the fact that I grew up inundated with it. I was born in ’77, so I came right into the eighties and it was just corporate shit piled on top of me. That’s all I knew. It wasn’t until I was in my twenties and kind of woke up and went, “What the fuck? That’s fucked up!”

There’s a form of brainwashing going on there, for sure. Like, “Wait a second!”

Wow, “Toys ‘R’ Us kid!” Man, they really got me.

I was taken with the whole Barbie element.

It’s totally related. For us, it’s G.I. Joes and action figures, which I’ve been doing for 10 years.

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Did you start by making action figures?

I went to art school at Pratt [Institute] in Brooklyn for a year. I got a 4.0, made the Dean’s List and I was bored, so I left. I took a year off, went to two other schools, and didn’t know what I wanted to do. In my last quarter, I started making trading cards. Half the set was my influencers and the other half was my own work. I started them because I was having the opposite of writer’s block. I had too many ideas and needed a way of organizing them. I started selling those for five, 10 bucks a pop, right off the bat. After maybe two years, it seemed like a natural progression to go from baseball cards to action figures. Jackson Pollock was my first action figure, and it hit immediately.

What’s the weirdest request you’ve gotten for a commission?

It was a private commission a number of years ago for a guy in LA. He was a total stoner and rapper wannabe. He wanted me to sculpt his dick on an action figure of himself, but with pants. He wanted to be able to pull the pants up if people came over and down to show his buddies his dick. Then it got really weird because, you know, flaccid or hard?

I would guess hard?

I think I actually made it swivel so it could go flaccid. He was giving the finger, too. I actually almost did Woody Allen as just a big cock and balls, but then I decided against it.

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I think the point gets across.

I’ve also done a lot of toppers for wedding cakes, but actually a lot of people are doing that now, either sculpting them from scratch or 3D printing them.

Is 3D printing screwing with your niche?

I just went ahead and learned the software so it wouldn’t pass me by. I don’t know what I’m doing with it yet. I’m just trying to get my head around purely digital sculpture, like CGI graphics for movies, which is the best 3D modeling, and then video games. What interests me about video games is those dudes are sitting around, maybe all day, every day, and that is their reality—their digital avatar. That’s kind of fucked up and demented but also fascinating to me.

It’s a virtual existence, but that blurring of the line between what’s virtual and what’s reality is interesting, especially as it becomes more prevalent.

It’s headed in that direction, and I still see a lot of room for art and sculpture, too. Right now, they’re trying to get CGI to mimic reality. Maybe they get there at some point. For me, it’s like, “Go for it.” Art, photography and film all tried to do the same thing, but after awhile, you can play with it. I see it as room for a guy like me to get in there and do something with it.

Did you feel like you had to put Kathryn Bigelow in the collection just to have a woman director?

Absolutely. That was actually the biggest argument I had with my wife, my sister, any female friend, and a few male friends, too. I would call myself out well in advance. Kathryn didn’t show up until the end. She was number 14. I’m glad you’re asking me about this because it still weighs on me.

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Well, you didn’t create the climate in the film industry…

I think it’s because it’s a fucked-up reality. There are plenty of talented female directors out there who are just as good as men, and they’re not getting the exposure. I felt like I had to address it somehow because it kept coming up naturally. I would call myself out, just because I saw it coming, and say, “I’m not doing any women.” And that discussion went like this every time, “I need it to sell. I’ve done 400 different figures, and from my inventory, 90 percent are sold. And guess what? At least half the inventory I haven’t sold is women.” I’d ask people to name a female director, and a lot couldn’t even do it.

Directors of shitty romantic comedies come to mind first.

So then I’d find myself teaching people about Kathryn Bigelow and that she won an Oscar. She’s very self-aware. She says outright that she makes these machismo action movies because she knows they’re the ones people will watch. Then I came up with the image of her as an actual Oscar.

That’s essentially what you’re doing, too: making what you know will sell. Which women have you depicted?

Oprah, Angelina Jolie, Hillary Clinton… she sold… Sarah Palin—yeah, okay, I mean, people hate her. Why would anyone want to buy that? But she’s an important character, the bad guy.

Maybe if you do iconic women as porn stars they’ll sell! What’s been the strongest reaction you’ve gotten to this show?

People laughing and smiling. I love overhearing someone giggling at one of the pieces when I’m here.

Originally featured on PRØHBTD