graf and streetart news compiled from the finest sites in the land by a robot.

VERDE – Brazil Graffiti, Sao Paulo

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

VERDE – Brazil Graffiti, Sao Paulo

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

I’m always going on about graffiti and street art in Brazil (Brasil), VERDE is painting out of Sao Paulo and his art is pretty varied and interesting. I love the abstract circles he does, mixed in with classic graff style. He kindly answered a few questions for WG… Always with the questions…

WG - When did you start painting, how did you start?

VERDE – When I was a child my father taught me to draw, that’s why I love art. As I grew up I learned to skate, listen to hardcore music, and sort of live the underground life where graffiti was very popular; Then in 2006 I started to work and paint on the walls and streets.

WG - What influences your art?

VERDE – I’m pretty sure my art is a mixture of many things, making my own style.

I really like 3D, realism, letters, old school, cartoons, abstract and many more, that I can mix with my creations and paints.
  
 
 

 

 

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

 

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

 WG - Where did the round circles style come from?
 
VERDE – I used to paint cartoons, letters.. but nowadays I am painting abstracts things, something like free raffs.. putting my mind far way to aprimorate my draws and my tecnics as I like.
 
WG - What artists do you like at the moment?
VERDE – I enjoy OsGemeos, Finok, Insane, Ciro Shu, Zezão.
 
WG - What are your favourite sneakers?
 
VERDE – Vans.. I’m really an addict! LOL
 
WG - What sort of graffiti are you into? Do you like the wildstyle type more, or old school fat bubble lettering?

VERDE – I believe that the graffiti is kind of an expression of the art, and art is defined as the expression of human creative skill and imagination.

For me its clear as the arrangement of social class and the place that you are with other elements.
Particularly I prefer the WildStyle, working with the letters, but the fat bubble lettering is really nice to paint when you wanna show up a rebel atittude.
 
WG - How long does it take you to do a large VERDE piece?
 
VERDE – Working with the bomb style It took me around five minutes, but it was something with 2 meters.

And if I have a bigger wall, I can do it in an hour.. 
 
WG - Do you paint with a crew or on your own, or both?
 
VERDE – Sometimes I paint with a friend, Gui (you made an interview with him too), or at the Graffiter Meeting and sometimes alone, it is more a kind of “motivation-thing” and one of us likes to express an individual feeling.
VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

 

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art - Strawberry

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art – Strawberry

 

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

WG - If you could only paint with 2 colours for the rest of your life, what colours would you choose?

 VERDE – I really like the color Green (translating to portuguese is gonna be my name.. VERDE), and Black.

Have a look at VERDE’s Flickr, it’s sick, and here is a video of VERDE painting, great vid!

Thanks very much to VERDE for taking the time to answer my questions, go check our more VERDE here!

We have loads of Brazil graff and urban art, check out previous posts from JONS and GUI.

Share and Bookmark

StumbleUpon
Digg
TwitThis
Reddit
del.icio.us
Mixx
Facebook

Related posts:

  1. GUI – Graffiti in Brazil – Sao Paulo
  2. Brazil (Brasil) Graffiti, São Paulo – by JONS
  3. Rio de Janeiro Graffiti – Brazil (Brasil) – From Renato A


Weapon Of Choice At The Thekla Tonight

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

After a summer off, Weapon of Choice is moving into a bigger venue for this month’s outing, taking to the water on the Thekla. Here’s the flyer and info, Sepr and Epok on the paint pens whilst it all goes off.

woc at thekla sept 09

Weapon of Choice for the 1st time on board the THEKLA!

Live graffiti from
EPOK & SEPR!

Hip hop & Dubstep from:
TASK FORCE!
GEMMY
GUIDO
CENTRAL SPILLZ
BETAMAX

Hosted by
BUGGSY & C-STRIKE-Z

B-Boys, Clothing giveaways!

Top bar hosted by Property of Bristol

Thekla 29th September 2009. 10-3AM

£10 on the door. £9 advance tickets from Weapon of Choice Gallery. 14 St Michael’s Hill, Bristol, BS2 8DT.


Shit We’re Diggin: Geoff Hargadon’s "Cash For Your Warhol" Prank

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

cashwarhol2.jpg

cashwarhol.jpg


Sometimes I feel like putting my hands up in the air

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Walking across Waterloo Bridge this morning, I was reminded of London-based printmaker, illustrator and linocut king Paul Catherall.

Iconic/controversial London landmarks are his thing (plus a few from New York), but ‘Battersea Brick’ is the stand-out piece for me.  

Lino, Lino, I can count on you

Lino, Lino, I can count on you

Check him out here: http://bit.ly/FlZBI.

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


Congratulations Al and Tim On This Week’s Launch of the Chapter One Gallery in London

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

genesislon.jpg
Stefan Marx

GENESIS_MichaelSwaney.jpg
Michael Swaney

Congratulations to our friends Al and Tim who tomorrow night, Wednesday, are launching their inaugural exhibition at Chapter One, their new gallery in London’s Newburgh Quarter (Soho)

Sara and I have known Al (aka Mysterious Al) and Tim (aka PMH) for a longtime. It was Al and Tim (along with Pure Evil, Dface, mjar, Adam Neate, Chimp, and Ichi Bunny) who first introduced us to Brick Lane and the London scene back when we launched the Wooster Collective site many years ago. For us, their Finders Keepers shows were the personification of the European street art scene and nothing has captured that energy since.

Tim tells us about the new gallery:

“We’ve been lucky enough over the past few years to travel the world and meet some amazing artists, who we have shaken our heads wondering why these artists have not been shown in London.

We believe that we are in a time of change, of flux..where there are many contemporary artists maturing into artists with the depth and quality of vision and skills to be genuinely importance… artists who have are already shown in museums around the globe, but in the London market are still unknown – either by naivety or lack of commercial hype.

Although the street art boom in London of the last few years has been exciting at certain times, we feel that London has not shown or featured many exciting contemporary artists that seem to be successes everywhere in the world – everywhere apart from our city!

We will be exhibiting artists that many people in London will be unfamiliar with, but in that respect we want to be like the great record labels, such as Blue Note and MoWax, where if you like what we do, you might not recognize the name of our next artist, but you trust us in delivering the best from around the world, and chances are you will be a big fan after seeing their work.

Growing up in around the late ‘90’s was inspiring, as it was a really exciting time for London…local music labels like MoWax and artists like Tracy Emin and Damian Hirst (back then!) showed us exciting

We were really excited and influenced by all the new and interesting art and music that was coming out of local record labels like Mo’ Wax, the whole YBA Damien Hirts and Tracy Emin scene… Skate art was really exciting and there was so much interesting stuff coming over from the states, that felt so exotic and far away at the time.

The early years of this century have been cool with the emergence of street-art. We were involved in all of that and we hadn’t a clue what sort of a monster we were inadvertently creating. It was exciting for a while, but then the over-inflated price tags attached to ‘street-art’ and a million stencil-artists riding in Banksy’s wake seemed to bring a real shift in the priorities of galleries and artists.

We could give you a list of names of who we will be showing, but that would ruin the surprise for you all…so keep your eyes peeled and you will see who we have planned.!

We feel that galleries in London have become a bit pedestrian…it seems like galleries aren’t somewhere that promotes, pushes and celebrates art, but simply shops pushing product without passion..like footlocker or Topshop. Call is idealists but galleries should be inspiring and exciting.

We want to bring the passion back.

We have events, launches and parties all in the pipeline. There wont be snooty assistants who are clueless about the art or the artists – there will always be someone there to talk you through it if you’d like…and we want everyone to feel welcome rather than unwanted.We have a nice outdoor area where people can meet and relax…although with todays rain we need some parasols! We are in the heart of London, and we want to be a meeting place, of not just ideas but of people. Around the world there are spaces which support scenes and individuals, but in London we seem to be lacking one. London is seen around the world as ‘cool’ or a hub of art…but in our honest opinion we feel it can be better, and like the punk ethic – if it aint being done, do it yourself!

After a decade of hustling and rejection..the 4 directors have a large network of Londoners who want to make London matter again…somewhere where the focus is on good art and pushing artists rather than solely on the cash till…true we are a business and would like to hear ‘profit’ rather than ‘overdraft’. We will be releasing many products, but again, products that we as fans would go crazy for, rather than a soleless by-product knocked out to cover overheads.”

So if you’re in London this week, be sure to head over to Chapter One and give Al and Tim a high-five from us.

Chapter One
33 Marshall St
London W1F 7ET
info@chapteronegallery.com
0207 287 7687


Mike Giant – An Introduction

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Alexone’s new blog

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

IMG_7911.jpg

Nice to see that our friend alexone has launched a new blog.


VERDE – Brazil Graffiti, Sao Paulo

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

VERDE – Brazil Graffiti, Sao Paulo

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

I’m always going on about graffiti and street art in Brazil (Brasil), VERDE is painting out of Sao Paulo and his art is pretty varied and interesting. I love the abstract circles he does, mixed in with classic graff style. He kindly answered a few questions for WG… Always with the questions…

WG - When did you start painting, how did you start?

VERDE – When I was a child my father taught me to draw, that’s why I love art. As I grew up I learned to skate, listen to hardcore music, and sort of live the underground life where graffiti was very popular; Then in 2006 I started to work and paint on the walls and streets.

WG - What influences your art?

VERDE – I’m pretty sure my art is a mixture of many things, making my own style.

I really like 3D, realism, letters, old school, cartoons, abstract and many more, that I can mix with my creations and paints.
  
 
 

 

 

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

 

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

 WG - Where did the round circles style come from?
 
VERDE – I used to paint cartoons, letters.. but nowadays I am painting abstracts things, something like free raffs.. putting my mind far way to aprimorate my draws and my tecnics as I like.
 
WG - What artists do you like at the moment?
VERDE – I enjoy OsGemeos, Finok, Insane, Ciro Shu, Zezão.
 
WG - What are your favourite sneakers?
 
VERDE – Vans.. I’m really an addict! LOL
 
WG - What sort of graffiti are you into? Do you like the wildstyle type more, or old school fat bubble lettering?

VERDE – I believe that the graffiti is kind of an expression of the art, and art is defined as the expression of human creative skill and imagination.

For me its clear as the arrangement of social class and the place that you are with other elements.
Particularly I prefer the WildStyle, working with the letters, but the fat bubble lettering is really nice to paint when you wanna show up a rebel atittude.
 
WG - How long does it take you to do a large VERDE piece?
 
VERDE – Working with the bomb style It took me around five minutes, but it was something with 2 meters.

And if I have a bigger wall, I can do it in an hour.. 
 
WG - Do you paint with a crew or on your own, or both?
 
VERDE – Sometimes I paint with a friend, Gui (you made an interview with him too), or at the Graffiter Meeting and sometimes alone, it is more a kind of “motivation-thing” and one of us likes to express an individual feeling.
VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

 

VERDE - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art - Strawberry

VERDE – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art – Strawberry

 

VERDE & GUI - Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

VERDE & GUI – Sao Paulo Brazil Graffiti Urban Art

WG - If you could only paint with 2 colours for the rest of your life, what colours would you choose?

 VERDE – I really like the color Green (translating to portuguese is gonna be my name.. VERDE), and Black.

Have a look at VERDE’s Flickr, it’s sick, and here is a video of VERDE painting, great vid!

Thanks very much to VERDE for taking the time to answer my questions, go check our more VERDE here!

We have loads of Brazil graff and urban art, check out previous posts from JONS and GUI.

Share and Bookmark

StumbleUpon
Digg
TwitThis
Reddit
del.icio.us
Mixx
Facebook

Related posts:

  1. GUI – Graffiti in Brazil – Sao Paulo
  2. Brazil (Brasil) Graffiti, São Paulo – by JONS
  3. Rio de Janeiro Graffiti – Brazil (Brasil) – From Renato A


ALTERNATIVE PORTRAIT OF EDWARD COLSTON

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »




A fun time was had by all at the INVADA INVASION at the COLSTON HALL on Saturday. Here’s a few of the pieces that made up our ‘Alternative Portrait Of Edward Colston’ EINE, MR JAGO, MARC BESSANT, ACERONE, CHINA MIKE, ANDY COUNCIL, RUSSELL MAURICE & ASBESTOS… Apologies for the poor quality photos… I was distracted by Guinness and ear splitting music…


PARIS POPS ROUND FOR A CUPPA

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »




Thanks to PARIS for giving our Gloucester Road yard a much needed face lift! The good news is that he’ll be exhibiting some new work in there over the next few weeks too… So keep em’ peeled…

High Jinks of the Gods

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

For those of a religious persuasion ‘The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away’, for the rest of us it breaks down to something more mundanely unfathomable, a catch 22 scenario, a cage of mortality where limitations are abound. The challenge is to surpass them, break boundaries of both reality and possibility. However one aspect of our shared existence will inevitably bear down on the greatest of minds, the strongest will, the mightiest of forms, and that is mortality. Death to the old flesh, long live the new, hail the cage and idealise the frame within which each of our potentially infinite imaginations dwell, for without transport all enquiry and all thought ceases to be. The moment the brain fails and the body dies, life ends.

Mankind immemorial, through succession of one life after another, has strived to reach beyond his own physical limitations, through invention, technology, self-mutilation, literature, art, chemistry, experientially, practically and philosophically we as a race are aware of our brief existence on this earth, we understand the limitations of our bodies, yet we as a society continually seek to redress the balance against Mother Nature in our favour.

Sam Jinks The Hanging Man 2007 silicon, paint & human hair 140.0 x 50.0 cm

Buddhism proposes the endlessness of the Here and Now, futurists focus on the possibilities of what might be through the dissemination of what is and has been. Much of popular culture takes a more literal view, inviting speculation on the parameters of acceptable mutation and mutilation such as plastic surgery, body building, piercings and tattoos, accepting our temporal limitations whilst proposing new avenues of form, whilst the media and science emblazon the ideals of longevity with an almost religious zeal. Those who trade in speculation of what is to come create literature, film, art that can transpose the qualities of the comparable infinite on to the mortal frames of the highly efficient mechanism that is the human body. On many levels man can surpass the framework of reality, of mortal existence, the confines of the anima and the carbon-based slice of the universe we maintain to be truth, however he cannot out think or out do the cruel truth of life.

Sam Jinks Doghead, 2008 30 x 140 x 60 cm mixed media

We each posses an incredible store of electro-chemical energy, many religions view this as an essential ingredient to a possible post-human metamorphosis, the continuation of consciousness beyond the physical realm, the chance through belief to reach beyond our limited sphere of existence, to pass on into the womb of the universe, where all thought and feeling can merge with a greater power. Yet for many, life is what you see, hear, feel, and think, that which one witnesses around oneself, birth, death, pain, disease, these cruel aspects of the human experience all inevitably ’seal the deal’, ensuring that even the youngest minds must on some level, even if it is merely instinctual, understand that we all die. We share an understanding that we are more than our mere physical form. An ideology tested by the resultant internal physiological interactions that conspire within this cage of flesh, instituting a realm of connective logic that will nevertheless witness our own demise. For each and every one of us, no matter what we or society considers our achievements or contributions to the progression of the success of the human race, will succumb.

Sam Jinks is very well aware of our limitations, to be human is to be flawed, to be alive is to be vulnerable to pain and death, his silicon-based representations of a form most familiar invokes a schismatic array of emotional and intellectual responses and repressions. Witnessing both the frailty of life and the moment of death, the humility of our true position in the order of things, the ultimate truth that each of us is fundamentally alone, and have both arrived and will depart this plane of existence with little more knowledge of that greater scheme of the infinite. Eventually, through a didactic logic, the distance between the representative and the actual is encouraged to falter, cushioning us from the blow, enabling us to seek and justify a purpose for existence.

Subject matter and context are Jinks’ allies, an Australian sculptor working with base materials such as silicon, paint and human hair, his creations lack nothing but the ‘breath of life’ in their representation of the body, unlike many similar works, those venerating celebrities past and present, the tradition of ‘wax works’, his figures commemorate a greater accomplishment in nature. The passage of life.

Sam Jinks Untitled (Baby), 2007 76 x 53cm silicon, paint & human hair

Hyperrealism lacks the truth – the aggregate of imperfections with which we subconsciously register signifiers of the natural, of the living, and even the dead – which are exposed within each of Jinks’ painfully natural pieces. The flaws offer an inexorable truth, that from the moment we are born we begin, at least in our physicality, to die. This vulnerability of a species, with a shared intellect and philosophy unbound by those same natural laws, still accepts, despite numerous spiritual obfuscations,  that this truth can never be shorn, can never be exiled to the past. The end is the future, the degradation of existence is our manifest destiny, and without the temperance of mortality, we may have never even attained consciousness in the first place.

Bar a freak development of the Pineal gland, there is little for any extraterrestrial to separate us from all other creatures of the earth, physically we are a weak and inefficient development in the timeline of evolution. What we are, as a race, is what we project, we clothe ourselves, paint ourselves, build one exoskeleton after another, be it a home, a car, a craft to repel the gravitational field of our planet, a cocoon, an artificial womb within which we can attain god-like achievements. A name, a title, a profession, proof of advanced intellect or education, a demeanour, skill or persona, can all too detract from the mind numbingly generic similarities between one individual and another.

Sam Jinks Untitled, 2007 silicon, paint & human hair

Many, instinctively believe that through their progeny they can outlive their own existence, fewer both believe and act on the creation of many different forms of art to serve the same purpose, Sam Jinks performs the latter, almost in an attempt to disprove the first.

Man is truly alone, both collectively and as individuals. We enter this mysterious space and leave it without fail, it is simply how we reflect those around us, how our actions adapt the perceptions and actions of all others, this is our legacy. We live in a world of body consciousness, body politic, yet ironically we have taken millions of years to evolve to the state where we are able to make these cultural choices, if we continue to exist as a race we may finally surpass physicality, envelope our own destiny as electrochemical beings, unbound by the cancerous mal-efficiency of the evolution of man. Until then, witness our limitations in the harsh light of a biological truth. Inspect the tinkerings of a formula of the gods, a process of unending trial and tribulation that has resulted in one being attempting to communicate to another before their inevitable demise at www.SamJinks.com.

Tags: art, baby, figurative, realistic, Sam Jinks, sculptor, sculpture, silicon sculpture, silicone, the hanging man

Related posts


High Jinks of the Gods

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

For those of a religious persuasion ‘The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away’, for the rest of us it breaks down to something more mundanely unfathomable, a catch 22 scenario, a cage of mortality where limitations are abound. The challenge is to surpass them, break boundaries of both reality and possibility. However one aspect of our shared existence will inevitably bear down on the greatest of minds, the strongest will, the mightiest of forms, and that is mortality. Death to the old flesh, long live the new, hail the cage and idealise the frame within which each of our potentially infinite imaginations dwell, for without transport all enquiry and all thought ceases to be. The moment the brain fails and the body dies, life ends.

Mankind immemorial, through succession of one life after another, has strived to reach beyond his own physical limitations, through invention, technology, self-mutilation, literature, art, chemistry, experientially, practically and philosophically we as a race are aware of our brief existence on this earth, we understand the limitations of our bodies, yet we as a society continually seek to redress the balance against Mother Nature in our favour.

Sam Jinks The Hanging Man 2007 silicon, paint & human hair 140.0 x 50.0 cm

Buddhism proposes the endlessness of the Here and Now, futurists focus on the possibilities of what might be through the dissemination of what is and has been. Much of popular culture takes a more literal view, inviting speculation on the parameters of acceptable mutation and mutilation such as plastic surgery, body building, piercings and tattoos, accepting our temporal limitations whilst proposing new avenues of form, whilst the media and science emblazon the ideals of longevity with an almost religious zeal. Those who trade in speculation of what is to come create literature, film, art that can transpose the qualities of the comparable infinite on to the mortal frames of the highly efficient mechanism that is the human body. On many levels man can surpass the framework of reality, of mortal existence, the confines of the anima and the carbon-based slice of the universe we maintain to be truth, however he cannot out think or out do the cruel truth of life.

Sam Jinks Doghead, 2008 30 x 140 x 60 cm mixed media

We each posses an incredible store of electro-chemical energy, many religions view this as an essential ingredient to a possible post-human metamorphosis, the continuation of consciousness beyond the physical realm, the chance through belief to reach beyond our limited sphere of existence, to pass on into the womb of the universe, where all thought and feeling can merge with a greater power. Yet for many, life is what you see, hear, feel, and think, that which one witnesses around oneself, birth, death, pain, disease, these cruel aspects of the human experience all inevitably ’seal the deal’, ensuring that even the youngest minds must on some level, even if it is merely instinctual, understand that we all die. We share an understanding that we are more than our mere physical form. An ideology tested by the resultant internal physiological interactions that conspire within this cage of flesh, instituting a realm of connective logic that will nevertheless witness our own demise. For each and every one of us, no matter what we or society considers our achievements or contributions to the progression of the success of the human race, will succumb.

Sam Jinks is very well aware of our limitations, to be human is to be flawed, to be alive is to be vulnerable to pain and death, his silicon-based representations of a form most familiar invokes a schismatic array of emotional and intellectual responses and repressions. Witnessing both the frailty of life and the moment of death, the humility of our true position in the order of things, the ultimate truth that each of us is fundamentally alone, and have both arrived and will depart this plane of existence with little more knowledge of that greater scheme of the infinite. Eventually, through a didactic logic, the distance between the representative and the actual is encouraged to falter, cushioning us from the blow, enabling us to seek and justify a purpose for existence.

Subject matter and context are Jinks’ allies, an Australian sculptor working with base materials such as silicon, paint and human hair, his creations lack nothing but the ‘breath of life’ in their representation of the body, unlike many similar works, those venerating celebrities past and present, the tradition of ‘wax works’, his figures commemorate a greater accomplishment in nature. The passage of life.

Sam Jinks Untitled (Baby), 2007 76 x 53cm silicon, paint & human hair

Hyperrealism lacks the truth – the aggregate of imperfections with which we subconsciously register signifiers of the natural, of the living, and even the dead – which are exposed within each of Jinks’ painfully natural pieces. The flaws offer an inexorable truth, that from the moment we are born we begin, at least in our physicality, to die. This vulnerability of a species, with a shared intellect and philosophy unbound by those same natural laws, still accepts, despite numerous spiritual obfuscations,  that this truth can never be shorn, can never be exiled to the past. The end is the future, the degradation of existence is our manifest destiny, and without the temperance of mortality, we may have never even attained consciousness in the first place.

Bar a freak development of the Pineal gland, there is little for any extraterrestrial to separate us from all other creatures of the earth, physically we are a weak and inefficient development in the timeline of evolution. What we are, as a race, is what we project, we clothe ourselves, paint ourselves, build one exoskeleton after another, be it a home, a car, a craft to repel the gravitational field of our planet, a cocoon, an artificial womb within which we can attain god-like achievements. A name, a title, a profession, proof of advanced intellect or education, a demeanour, skill or persona, can all too detract from the mind numbingly generic similarities between one individual and another.

Sam Jinks Untitled, 2007 silicon, paint & human hair

Many, instinctively believe that through their progeny they can outlive their own existence, fewer both believe and act on the creation of many different forms of art to serve the same purpose, Sam Jinks performs the latter, almost in an attempt to disprove the first.

Man is truly alone, both collectively and as individuals. We enter this mysterious space and leave it without fail, it is simply how we reflect those around us, how our actions adapt the perceptions and actions of all others, this is our legacy. We live in a world of body consciousness, body politic, yet ironically we have taken millions of years to evolve to the state where we are able to make these cultural choices, if we continue to exist as a race we may finally surpass physicality, envelope our own destiny as electrochemical beings, unbound by the cancerous mal-efficiency of the evolution of man. Until then, witness our limitations in the harsh light of a biological truth. Inspect the tinkerings of a formula of the gods, a process of unending trial and tribulation that has resulted in one being attempting to communicate to another before their inevitable demise at www.SamJinks.com.

Tags: art, baby, figurative, realistic, Sam Jinks, sculptor, sculpture, silicon sculpture, silicone, the hanging man

Related posts