News

INVADER – 2012 Miami recap

It is with great pleasure that we present a re-cap of our 2012 Miami program, in which we placed a focus on the work of Parisian artist INVADER and his recent projects in the city of Miami…

For our booth at PULSE art fair, the artist created a site-specific installation with several exciting components.

Two new publications were released during the fair, one being: Invasion of Miami, a guide map to the locations of the artist’s numerous placements throughout the city.

The second publication release was Mission Miami, a book which documents the Miami invasion and the project Art 4 Space (available for purchase through our online shop HERE).

A video projection, which ran on loop during fair hours, featured approximately 4 hours of footage in real time, taken from the artist’s recent project Art 4 Space, in which he sent a mosaic titled Space One into the stratosphere, along with a camera and GPS tracking device.

Space One was exhibited in the booth along with the original launching apparatus.

A weather balloon carried Space One into the air and a parachute allowed it to float safely back to earth.

A selection of Miami Aliases (single replicas of the artist’s mosaics placed on the streets) were exhibited at PULSE (click HERE to view the works).

A special series of Mission Miami hardcover books covered in original mosaics and hung in custom plexiglass cases were also part of the exhibition at PULSE.

Finally, the world premiere of Art 4 Space—a 26 minute short film by Invader, documenting the project—was presented by Jonathan LeVine Gallery and Miami International Film Festival on Thursday, 12/6 at the Colony Theatre in South Beach. Click HERE to see photos from this special screening event.

Click HERE to view a trailer and series of still images from the film.

That concludes our 2012 Miami program. Details on future Art 4 Space screenings will be announced, stay tuned!

INVADER film – World Premiere

On December 6, 2012, Jonathan LeVine Gallery and the Miami International Film Festival hosted the World Premiere of Art 4 Space, a short film by Parisian artist INVADER, documenting a project in which he launched a mosaic into the Earth’s stratosphere.

The private event was held in conjunction with Jonathan LeVine Gallery’s program at PULSE-Miami during Art Basel Miami Beach, comprised of a solo presentation of new works by INVADER. The booth included a video projection and a site-specific installation highlighting a selection of aliases from the artist’s Miami Invasion. During the fair, the artist also released a newly published book Mission Miami as well as a new invasion guide map, both documenting the his invasion of the city of Miami.

* Photographs by Miami International Film Festival as well as Adam Wallacavage

The screening took place at the Colony Theatre, a beautiful 80-year-old Art Deco gem located on Lincoln Road, in the heart of South Beach, Florida

The marquee

Custom INVADER admission stamps at the entrance

Jonathan LeVine

Guests finding seats before showtime

Miami International Film Festival’s Executive Director, Jaie Laplante introduces the film

Immediately following the film, Carlo McCormick warms up the crowd for a brief artist Q&A

INVADER appears wearing the same suit worn during his space launch project, as seen in the film

The artist takes a few questions from the audience

After the Q&A session, guests joined festival and gallery staff for a cocktail hour nearby. Many thanks to everyone who attended, we hope you enjoyed the film as much as we did! Stay tuned for details on date/location of the next screening event, coming soon…

DALeast video

This time-lapse video features Chinese-born, South Africa-based artist DALeast painting a large-scale mural in Rochester NY, in the Summer of 2012. This piece was part of a project created by the Synthesis Collaborative and featured in the documentary Wall/Therapy.

Produced by: Ian Wilson and Philip Night
Directed and Edited by: Jeff Coles Smith
Music by: Jeff Coles Smith

INVADER at PULSE-Miami 2012

INVADER : Mission Miami / Art 4 Space
PULSE-Miami at The Ice Palace Booth #E305
1400 North Miami Avenue, Miami FL
December 4—9, 2012

Jonathan LeVine Gallery is pleased to announce its program for PULSE-Miami 2012 with a solo presentation of new mosaic works by Invader inspired by his invasion of Miami and operation Art 4 Space.

In 2012, Invader visited Miami for the second time, expanding his invasion of the city. He added 44 new mosaics to the 28 previously placed in 2010, bringing the total number of Miami invaders to 72. As with all of his invasions, Invader methodically maps out and documents each individual placement on the street. His meticulous reference system allows him to capture and immortalize the project on a global scale. This archival process is materialized by the publication of Invasion of Miami, a map showing his placement locations throughout the city and the invasion guide/book Mission Miami, both released in conjunction with this exhibition.

Concurrent to the invasion of the city, the artist reached new territory with the project Art 4 Space. After fifteen years of spreading mosaics around the globe, his work made its first suborbital sojourn on August 20th, 2012, when he launched the mosaic Space-One from the Space Coast of Florida in a device he created using his own resources. Equipped with a camera, the balloon traveled across the atmosphere into the stratosphere, reaching its peak at 21 miles (35 km) before descending, returning the world’s first astronautic artwork back to Earth along with video and photographic documentation of its journey.

The exhibition at PULSE highlights a selection of Miami aliases (single clones of pieces placed throughout the city) and features a projection of Art 4 Space, a film documenting the surprising and epic journey of Space-One. The installation includes the original Space-One mosaic and the low-tech device that enabled its ascension, as well as a series of 20 special copies of Mission Miami with mosaic covers. The standard edition of the book will be released as well as Invasion of Miami, the artist’s 23rd invasion map, which will be distributed at the fair to guide the public in navigating the invaded territory and discovering the locations of his mosaics throughout the city.

For further information and to view a trailer of the film Art 4 Space, please click HERE.

ABOUT THE ARTIST
Invader was born in 1969 in Paris, France, the city where he is currently based. In the late 1990s, he began placing popular 8-bit video game characters of the late 1970s on the streets of Paris, using mosaic tiles to simulate digital pixels. His project has spread on a global scale as the artist continues invading public spaces across five continents, on the streets of over seventy cities, worldwide. Invader was featured in Exit Through the Gift Shop, an Oscar-nominated documentary film directed by renowned British street artist Banksy. Additionally, his work has been exhibited in numerous institutions including Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA) in Los Angeles, Museum of Contemporary Art (MCASD) in San Diego, Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP) in Brazil, Museé Ingres in France, and many more.

ABOUT JONATHAN LEVINE GALLERY
Jonathan LeVine Gallery is committed to new and cutting edge art. Our roots go back to 1995, when Jonathan’s life-long participation in punk and underground music grew into a curatorial experiment with the visual culture that surrounded him. We moved to Chelsea in 2005, with an eye towards honoring and connecting with the history and context of Post War art. We contribute to the dialogue by challenging the conventions of the canon – exploring the terrain of the high/low and everything in between. Jonathan LeVine Gallery is located at 529 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011. For further information, please visit: www.jonathanlevinegallery.com, call: 212.243.3822 or email: info@jonathanlevinegallery.com.

ABOUT PULSE
PULSE Contemporary Art Fair is the leading US art fair dedicated solely to contemporary art. Through its annual editions in Miami and New York, PULSE provides a unique platform for diverse galleries to present a progressive blend of renowned and pioneering contemporary artists, alongside an evolving series of original programming. The fair’s distinctive commitment to the art community and visitor experience makes PULSE unique among art fairs and creates an art market experience that is both dynamic and inviting. www.pulse-art.com  


 

Dylan Egon at ReGeneration

Jonathan LeVine Gallery in partnership with ABC Carpet & Home and reGeneration are pleased to announce Art As Lifestyle, an exhibition of works by Dylan Egon. The opening reception will take place on December 1, 2012 from 6—10pm. In support of National Aids Day, a percentage of sales during the opening reception will be donated to AIDS victims of Sandy, a charity supporting people living with AIDS based in New York City who were affected by Hurricane Sandy.

Art As Lifestyle represents an exciting collaboration between Egon and reGeneration Furniture. Like many collaborations, this one began with a conversation about the intersection between art and design, resulting in new works that fuse sensibilities and present a fresh aesthetic vision.

Egon is best known for his mixed media assemblage pieces that include imagery from American pop culture. Rivets, a motif throughout the work, are characteristic of the artist’s sense of craftmanship and machinery. This exhibition presents several mixed media collage works, adding context to the pieces that the artist has made in collaboration with reGeneration. The furniture brand’s new line includes several editioned cabinets, upholstery fabric and wool blankets, all featuring graphics by Egon.

In keeping with the artist’s ideals of creating accessible editions, wearable and boutique items screen printed with Egon’s imagery will be available for sale at the opening reception and for the duration of the exhibition.

How & Nosm: Huffington Post 1

HUFFINGTON POST
November 8, 2012

Photos and text by:
Jaime Rojo & Steve Harrington, Brooklyn Street Art (BSA)

New Mural Pays Tribute to Wall’s Owner, His Family, and New Yorkers

The newly painted Goldman Wall is here on Bowery and Houston Street for you to pour over; a dense and storied depiction of the trials and tribulations that no one escapes, deftly rendered with cans and brushes in precise and purposeful strokes. A huge NYC tattoo of life lessons and metaphors by How and Nosm, the new mural is their tribute to a city recovering from a crippling storm and to the memory of the neighborhood guy who turned this wall into an institution, Tony Goldman.

"It wasn’t premeditated, but we painted this wall during a very tough time for New York City, and at a very tough time for those who loved Tony and who admired his dedication to art in the streets. Our work always depicts life; with both its dark and bright side."

No strangers to hard times, the twins know the street. With their work they study and pull apart and reconstruct the duality of daily existence, swinging on the pendulum of extremes, looking for balance somewhere in between, trying to avoid getting caught in the storm. Partners and brothers, philosophers and students, How and Nosm mark this wall with a stylized "X" at the intersection of Houston and Bowery, where a wind battered and flooded Manhattan sat this autumn for days in darkness while it’s northern half was still illuminated; our beloved city fumbling for it’s footing, unbalanced and off-kilter. The "X" locates Tony Goldman’s gift like a pin dropped on your aerial GPS map, but it also marks a central location of the 1970s/80s raging "Downtown" art scene where it began; a signpost for myriad interlocking lifelines and a genesis for one of New Yorks’ longest-running street art exhibitions.

With an auto reflexive line drawing style that leads one story into the next, the circular spinning of tales and small universes invite you to look into the drama and observe; tight winding info-graphics of an undulating life, glorious and dreadful in it’s functional dysfunction. A perfect storm contained in one large canvas, this one sometimes bubbles over. Each vignette is instructive, playfully honoring and negating while the twins interrupt each other to give you a running commentary on society, the environment, politics, psychology, family, a maybe a bit of spirituality.

Plain-talking gents in the rough, How and Nosm have been rising steadily for two decades to a now global stature on the graffiti/street art/fine art stage. Born in the Basque country, raised in Germany, the firey twins who are known in the Bronx as graffiti kings with the Tats Cru are living all-Brooklyn now. Bringing their lunch to Manhattan every day while painting because no businesses were open, working only in the day because there were no working streetlights… the mural itself becomes yet one more New York tale of determination. "People kept stopping on the sidewalk to tell us how much they appreciated that we came out at such a tough time to beautify and to bring some color to the city. Most thought it was very uplifting and we felt we did the right thing by coming out," say the artists.

From Haring to Scharf, Fairey and Faile, the many New York stories spawned by and sprayed onto this wall have given it a pivotal place in Street Art history while Houston Street’s boisterous traffic and Manhattan’s lust for reinvention have rushed past it for three decades. Now as we rebuild from the storm, How and Nosm remind you that there is "The Day After," a compelling invitation and unabashed encouragement to those battered brothers and sisters who had their doubts. "There will always be a day after and it will get better for sure," the brothers say.

From the sidewalk you can look up at a rotating solar system of vignettes and stories as they cluster and revolve around an invisible central power source. How and Nosm walk with you on the sidewalk looking upward, describing their tales and metaphors, sometimes dark and harrowing, sometimes comforting, never pandering. Painted in their signature black, white, and red, these tightly coiled inner stories are tied to their biographies as much as the timeless trials and joys that are more universal — the ones that bind us one to the other.

"On the right hand side you find a black half circle with a face depicting the approach of something bad about to happen, like the storm. On the left you see the red half circle rise up again," the duo said.

"On the very top left side you can see a person holding a black heart trying to pass it on while riding on a bull. You have to be very strong to be able to ride a bull — which means you have to be strong during these challenging times and find a way to support those in need."

Every life is full with stories, like this wall is. Here is a boat that has broken apart, there a crowd protecting birds from attack, and over there an entire scene balancing on the back of a whale. One central image is described as a group hug of a family bound together during adversity. Perhaps this one is How and Nosms’ nod to the City and to the Goldman family itself, who are still weathering their personal storm of grief even as they continue this, their commitment to the city.

For the brothers, it is all part of the larger piece. "So basically the wall reflects the selfishness of humans but at the same time the beauty of interaction and a commitment to love for each other in good and bad times." In these times of loss and stress and insecurity, it’s hard to think of a better gift to New York.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jaime-rojo-steven-harrington/how-nosm-not-ready-for-po_b_2080503.html

How & Nosm on 12oz Prophet

How & Nosm’s Houston Street Tribute to Tony Goldman
Text and photos by Martha Cooper

Identical twins How & Nosm, were born in Spain, raised in Germany and permanently moved to NYC in 1999. After joining the legendary TATS CRU in the Bronx,  they honed their spray painting skills on a wide variety of surfaces all over the city. For the past few years, they’ve experimented with a limited palette of black, white and shades of red,  adding brushes and stencils to their repertoire.

The twins are upbeat but their intricate compositions often depict death and destruction with accents of blood throughout. They began painting their mural on Houston Street just two days after Hurricane Sandy hit NY.  The neighborhood around the wall was without electricity, shops were shuttered and even the traffic lights were off.  Unfazed, the twins finished the mural in record time. They titled their piece, “The Day After”.

Watching them paint was fascinating. Working from a rough sketch, they started at opposite ends of the long wall outlining complicated figures within figures in black with tiny brushes and spray paint. They rarely spoke to each other or even looked at each other’s work but it was impossible for me to distinguish a difference in style. Their combined style is original and instantly identifiable and somehow they both can paint in exactly the same way. Must be a twin thing.

The Houston Street wall has become the most prestigious and famous street art site in the world. In 2008 Jeffrey Deitch teamed up with the owner of the wall, Tony Goldman to recreate a mural Keith Haring painted in 1982 for what would have been Keith’s 50th birthday. Tony decided to continue the project by inviting prominent street artists to put work there. Since 2009 the wall has been painted or wheat pasted by Os Gemeos, OBEY, Barry McGee, Kenny Scharf, JR, Faile, Retna and Aiko. In the process, Tony became one of street arts’ biggest fans and supporters. Sadly he did not live to see How & Nosm’s wall but I’m pretty sure he would have loved it. It is a spectacular mural and a fine tribute to his legacy.


http://www.12ozprophet.com/martha_cooper/entry/how-nosms-houston-street-tribute-to-tony-goldman/

Hurricane Sandy Relief

Many local communities are in need of assistance post-Sandy, here is a resource guide on some available ways to help the relief effort…

RED CROSS
For info on how to donate funds (online, via text or in-person) and volunteer:
http://www.nyredcross.org/?nd=new_york_city
For info on giving blood how to locate the nearest blood drive:
http://www.redcrossblood.org/

World Vision
An organization providing supplies and food to children and families affected by natural disaster:
http://donate.worldvision.org/OA_HTML/xxwv2ibeCCtpItmDspRte.jsp?funnel=dn&item=1753180&go=item&section=10339&

AmeriCare
Tthe AmeriCare Disaster Relief Fund, which aims to supply resources to the victims of natural disaster:
http://www.americares.org/?linkid=donationlogo/

Feeding America
 A network of food banks, delivering food to those in need. Find the nearest food banks and how to donate:
http://feedingamerica.org/how-we-fight-hunger/programs-and-services/network-programs/disaster-relief/hurricane-sandy.aspx

OCCUPY Sandy Relief
A coalition of people & organizations dedicated to implementing aid and establishing hubs for neighborhood resource distribution:
http://interoccupy.net/occupysandy/

NEW YORK CITY

City Harvest
An organization working to provide food to the affected areas in all five boroughs:
http://www.cityharvest.org/hurricanesandy

NYC Service
Find out the time and location of volunteer opportunities. Also, sign up to help clean up NYC parks:
http://www.nycservice.org/

United Way of New York City
Fill out a volunteer interest form and help with the relief and clean-up efforts in all five boroughs:
http://action.unitedwaynyc.org/page/s/sandy-volunteer-interest-form

Salvation Army (NY Division)
Donate money online to the Salvation Army Hurricane Sandy Relief and learn about the many food drop locations in the Greater New York area:
http://www.use.salvationarmy.org/gnyd

Hope for New York
Learn about meeting times and locations for volunteer opportunities around New York City:
http://hfny.org/hurricane/#needs

New York Cares
Discover Hurricane Sandy-specific volunteer opportunities:
http://newyorkcares.org/volunteer/disaster/

Food Bank for NYC
Provides food and emergency meals to New Yorkers, see website for info on volunteer opportunities:
http://www.foodbanknyc.org/

Team Rubicon
Donate to this disaster relief program that utilizes the skills and experience of military veterans along with medical professionals to deploy emergency response teams:
https://fundraise.teamrubiconusa.org/checkout/donation?cid=5643

The Humane Society
Assisting animals and families who had to evacuate New York and New Jersey areas:
https://secure.humanesociety.org/site/Donation2?df_id=11020&11020.donation=form1&s_src=webdn_sandy_ws102912

ASPCA
Accepting donations, their efforts provide relief to animals in need of assistant as a result of Hurricane Sandy:
https://donate.aspca.org/donate/Donations/Website/Website_Membership_HS.aspx?PlacementID=3001583

BROOKLYN

Brooklyn Community Foundation
100% of your money donation will go towards helping Brooklyn communities and organizations affected by Hurricane Sandy:
https://connect.brooklyncommunityfoundation.org/brooklyn-recovery-fund

Red Hook Recovers
Find out when and where to donate food and supplies to Red Hook, Brooklyn. Also, receive updates on relief efforts and learn how to volunteer your time:
https://redhook.recovers.org/

Red Hook Initiative
Provides emergency supplies, hot meals, access to power and communications and coordinate community volunteer efforts:
http://www.rhicenter.org/index.html

QUEENS

The Meat Hook Rockaways Relief
This Brooklyn-based butchery shop is cooking meals and collecting supplies to those affected in the Rockaways. Learn when and where to drop off food and supplies HERE.

Astoria Recovers
Find out where to volunteer and what supplies are needed to help the residents of Astoria, Queens:
https://astoria.recovers.org/


STATEN ISLAND

Staten Island Recovers
Stay up-to-date about the relief efforts in Staten Island and find out what supplies to donate:
https://statenisland.recovers.org/

NEW JERSEY

Community Food Bank of NJ
Find out how to donate money to the Food Bank and where to drop of food and supplies to help those in New Jersery:
http://www.njfoodbank.org/

The Food Bank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties
Contribute online to this organization that provides food and other disaster relief for people impacted by Hurricane Sandy at the Jersey Shore and Ocean Counties:
http://www.foodbankmoc.org/