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Lassoing The Cowboy Myth

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Matt Straub is well known for his use of mythologised cowboy iconography in his paintings. His style strides both pop art and abstract expressionism, his intent to deconstruct the idealised nostalgia associated with America's gun-slinging past, appropriating metaphor for his treatise on a fragile future and its foundations of a false history. Yet still there's humour abound in Straub's work, both in his creative process and final results, his art engenders the a split reaction within most viewers, one of simultaneous familiarity and surprise.

Matt Straub - Kapow

Dismantling cultural sentimentality can be a tricky process, his use of comic characters such as images of cowboys, cowgirls, guns and horses immediately deflate any sense of political turbulence, although it is still always there, hovering in the background, clinically assessing the power of this particular set of signifiers.

The media as well as the twisted tales of opportunistic histories, many of which were little more than ad hoc myth invented for the sole purpose of engendering figures of power and commerce to the public's hearts. As Hollywood matured the traditional central hero character of Westerns was frequently utilised as a device to parallel the woes and failings of modern society. As cowboy movies moved on through the decades the clear cut line between the bad guys and the good guys began to blur, the devastation of the Native American culture was re-examined, the rise of the anti-hero in many of Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns, and finally the drudgery and desolation of frontier life were brought to the fore.

Matt Straub - Cowgirl

However, Hollywood has a habit of reinventing itself as well as many of its movie genres time and time again, sometimes successfully, sometimes not so. As with sex, nostalgia sells, and it sells far more than the brutal and usually rather uninspiring tales of history laid bare. The historical iconographies and biographies of those who have been deemed brave and courageous, political or military genius, the noble aspirations of peoples in turmoil, can be tarnished. A modern myth cannot be sustained, the plethora of communications technology, the failings of the PR industry to sustain their exaggerations under the naked light of the truth, the eternal reduction in the attention span of the human race, it just doesn't happen.

The past offers a chance to rewrite the imperfections of any culture, given enough time and momentum a fake heritage can be nurtured through the resultant misrepresentations of the creative industry. America compared to many European countries is still relatively young, what would be considered colloquial in Britain is seen as antique in the USA. I live in a town where the majority of houses are over a century old, it is a heritage area and thus protected from any major development. But houses of this age are commonplace in Britain, I have rented apartments in houses built as far back as the 16th Century, but again this is not a rarity. History surrounds the British as does a majority of Europeans, so much so we take it for granted.

Matt Straub - Crack

America must find and venerate history wherever it can find it, to the extent the monetary value of relatively recent and rather mundane items that could be found in any humble home a century before can, in certain cases, reach tens of thousands of dollars. The frontier era is treasured for many reasons by the Americans, it captures the essence of a spirit of freedom, a conquering of the unknown, a battle against the hardship of subsistence farming, clan wars regarding the claim of territories, the rush for gold and oil, and literally the establishment of a nation. The cowboy stands a lone figure, winning against impossible odds, a stake in a new life with broader horizons than anyone across the continent could have  imagined at the time.

Matt Straub - This Is The Way It Always Ends

Hollywood and in turn government, corporate America and the citizens of the United States view this era with a heartfelt nostalgia that cannot truly be understood by other cultures of the world. Life was hard, men were men, women were women, the many fought bravely for the good of all, the survival of a nation depended on the glamorisation of the humble cow herder. Life has moved on, but the metaphorical resonance of the cowboy in everything from marketing to politics means that this icon of a frontier country will remain powerful for many years to come. Albeit the fact that Straub, amongst others, is consciously deconstructing this myth, in my opinion, merely feeds the beast of nostalgia so deep in the heart of contemporary American culture.

To see more of Matt Straub's fascinating work try these following sites:-

Opus Art

One Art World

Art Price

Art Net

Tags: Abstract expressionism, Americana, cowboys, Matt Straub, modern myth, nostalgia, Pop Art, Westerns

Related posts


Lassoing The Cowboy Myth

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Matt Straub is well known for his use of mythologised cowboy iconography in his paintings. His style strides both pop art and abstract expressionism, his intent to deconstruct the idealised nostalgia associated with America's gun-slinging past, appropriating metaphor for his treatise on a fragile future and its foundations of a false history. Yet still there's humour abound in Straub's work, both in his creative process and final results, his art engenders the a split reaction within most viewers, one of simultaneous familiarity and surprise.

Matt Straub - Kapow

Dismantling cultural sentimentality can be a tricky process, his use of comic characters such as images of cowboys, cowgirls, guns and horses immediately deflate any sense of political turbulence, although it is still always there, hovering in the background, clinically assessing the power of this particular set of signifiers.

The media as well as the twisted tales of opportunistic histories, many of which were little more than ad hoc myth invented for the sole purpose of engendering figures of power and commerce to the public's hearts. As Hollywood matured the traditional central hero character of Westerns was frequently utilised as a device to parallel the woes and failings of modern society. As cowboy movies moved on through the decades the clear cut line between the bad guys and the good guys began to blur, the devastation of the Native American culture was re-examined, the rise of the anti-hero in many of Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns, and finally the drudgery and desolation of frontier life were brought to the fore.

Matt Straub - Cowgirl

However, Hollywood has a habit of reinventing itself as well as many of its movie genres time and time again, sometimes successfully, sometimes not so. As with sex, nostalgia sells, and it sells far more than the brutal and usually rather uninspiring tales of history laid bare. The historical iconographies and biographies of those who have been deemed brave and courageous, political or military genius, the noble aspirations of peoples in turmoil, can be tarnished. A modern myth cannot be sustained, the plethora of communications technology, the failings of the PR industry to sustain their exaggerations under the naked light of the truth, the eternal reduction in the attention span of the human race, it just doesn't happen.

The past offers a chance to rewrite the imperfections of any culture, given enough time and momentum a fake heritage can be nurtured through the resultant misrepresentations of the creative industry. America compared to many European countries is still relatively young, what would be considered colloquial in Britain is seen as antique in the USA. I live in a town where the majority of houses are over a century old, it is a heritage area and thus protected from any major development. But houses of this age are commonplace in Britain, I have rented apartments in houses built as far back as the 16th Century, but again this is not a rarity. History surrounds the British as does a majority of Europeans, so much so we take it for granted.

Matt Straub - Crack

America must find and venerate history wherever it can find it, to the extent the monetary value of relatively recent and rather mundane items that could be found in any humble home a century before can, in certain cases, reach tens of thousands of dollars. The frontier era is treasured for many reasons by the Americans, it captures the essence of a spirit of freedom, a conquering of the unknown, a battle against the hardship of subsistence farming, clan wars regarding the claim of territories, the rush for gold and oil, and literally the establishment of a nation. The cowboy stands a lone figure, winning against impossible odds, a stake in a new life with broader horizons than anyone across the continent could have  imagined at the time.

Matt Straub - This Is The Way It Always Ends

Hollywood and in turn government, corporate America and the citizens of the United States view this era with a heartfelt nostalgia that cannot truly be understood by other cultures of the world. Life was hard, men were men, women were women, the many fought bravely for the good of all, the survival of a nation depended on the glamorisation of the humble cow herder. Life has moved on, but the metaphorical resonance of the cowboy in everything from marketing to politics means that this icon of a frontier country will remain powerful for many years to come. Albeit the fact that Straub, amongst others, is consciously deconstructing this myth, in my opinion, merely feeds the beast of nostalgia so deep in the heart of contemporary American culture.

To see more of Matt Straub's fascinating work try these following sites:-

Opus Art

One Art World

Art Price

Art Net

Tags: Abstract expressionism, Americana, cowboys, Matt Straub, modern myth, nostalgia, Pop Art, Westerns

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Ipswich nov 2009

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Commission for the Salthouse Harbour Hotel


David Ellis New Art Prints – Competition! Win 1 of 3 Exclusive Limited Prints!

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

David Ellis New Art Prints – Competition! Win a Print!

A new movie called ‘Spread‘ starring Ashton Kutcher, Anne Heche and Margarita Levieva is being released on November 10th, and in celebation of this the promo people have got awesome urban and visual artist David Ellis to produce some exclusive new prints centred around LA and the movie.

So what does this have to do with you? Well we have 3 new David Ellis art prints to give away to World Graffiti readers! Yes it’s a competition and you can win one.

What do they look like I hear you ask?

 david-ellis-urban-art-graffiti-spread-movie-exclusive-print3

david-ellis-urban-art-graffiti-spread-movie-exclusive-print1

david-ellis-urban-art-graffiti-spread-movie-exclusive-print2

So now movie people are using urban artists to promote new movies that aren’t about urban art? Well yes, they are. And why not! Reviews for the movie so far are decent so go check it out.

So how can you win one? IT’S EASY! Simply watch the ‘Spread’ movie trailer and email me the answer to this super easy question…

Nikki (Ashton Kutcher) says he thought every day would be like a music video for what band?

1 – Van Morrison

2 – Van Halen

3 – Vanity

Here is the movie trailer to the new LA-based movie ‘Spread’, have a watch and email the answer 1, 2 or 3 to james@world-graffiti.com, and you could have an exclusive David Ellis print flying over to you!

I’m afraid the competition is only open to people within the USA, sorry Euro and worldwide peeps…

David Ellis – Ellis is part of the Barnstormer artist collective (collective of New York/Tokyo-based artists who create large-scale collaborative paintings, films and performances), you may know him from awesome urban art animation videos like this one with Italian artist BLU

 

Bit of blurb about David Ellis…

David Ellis is an artist born into a family immersed in music. In his youth Ellis had little patience with piano lessons or reading sheet music. Instead he absorbed everything on The Super Mix, a Saturday night radio program broadcast from the nearby Fort Bragg military base. Each week a new cassette tape of emerging New York hip-hop found its way into the life of a child growing up in a log house in North Carolina. By the time Grandmaster Flash and the Furious 5 released The Message, Ellis was writing rhymes and banging out beats with his friends on the desks at school. Things have since become much louder.

Ellis’ work continues to interpret music and sound. His paintings are often recorded in a form of digital time-lapse animation Ellis calls motion painting. Like jazz, these works provide Ellis with an opportunity to combine ideas with collaborators or work solo within a form that promotes improvisation and spontaneity. For a recent commission the artist painted a truck from sunup to sundown over five consecutive days. Ellis often stages events when exhibiting his motion paintings, inviting musicians, performers, and sound artists to interpret the work live. His motion painting, Paint on Trucks in a World in Need of Love was recently exhibited at MoMA.

Ellis’ paintings are frequently improvised. He works directly on the walls of spaces that remain open to the public during installation and shares the making of the work with viewers. The experience is much like a band playing in front of a passing audience.

Ellis further explores sound with kinetic installations that produce analogue sequences in rhythm.

Come on, you know you want one. simply email the answer to james@world-graffiti.com and I’ll be picking 3 people out at random. Closing date is 14th November so get a move on!

ANCHOR BAY ENTERTAINMENT
AVAILABLE ON DVD & BLU RAY™ November 10, 2009
SYNOPSIS:
In SPREAD, Nikki (Ashton Kutcher) isn’t a gigolo. He’s a sexual grifter, a fun-loving, freeloading hipster who understands his greatest assets are his looks and sexual prowess, which he uses to charm his way into the hearts of the city’s richest women and enjoy their lifestyle. Nikki gets a free place to live, fantastic gifts, A-list access, and plenty of sex. The women get to feel young, beautiful, and utterly fulfilled in the bedroom.

It’s a mutually beneficial set-up… That is, until Nikki is forced to choose between love and money, and decide whether he can live on his own once and for all in the hopes of finding something real.

spread The Movie 3d - David Ellis Print

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UKSA listed in the Top 25 UK Arts & Culture Blogs from Creativetourist.com

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
We’re honoured to announce that we’ve been placed at no.13 in the creativetourist.com’s “Top 25 UK Arts & Culture Blogs” for 2009!
We in a list that is chocka with amazing blogs, talented writers and some truely great content. Thanks to Creative Tourist for compiling the list and we hope to stay there for at least the [...]


Gallery: Chloe Early at Stolen Space

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
Catch the full gallery of this awesome show after the jump. More info on the show over at Stolen Space.
Thanks, as always to WallKandy for the pics, catch all his sets here.


Cool Britannia

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Great new print from Prefab 77 to coincide with their first US solo show at The BLDG.

‘Britannia’ will be released on November 13th here: http://bit.ly/2h0J9.

Bloody Chilly Britannia

Bloody freezing more like

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

For more Prefab 77 prints go here: www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


Gallery: Chloe Early at Stolen Space

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
Catch the full gallery of this awesome show after the jump. More info on the show over at Stolen Space.
Thanks, as always to WallKandy for the pics, catch all his sets here.


Not street art but…we like it.

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
“A celebration of creative talents living and working in London today”, nice. More info at Chapter One.

Related posts

George Morris at the Schwartz gallery (0)
Genesis at Chapter One gallery (0)
War Pen at The Leonard Street Gallery (0)
Video: The best of Mutate Britain (0)
Video: Sickboy – Stay Free (2)


Not street art but…we like it.

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
“A celebration of creative talents living and working in London today”, nice. More info at Chapter One.

Related posts

George Morris at the Schwartz gallery (0)
Genesis at Chapter One gallery (0)
War Pen at The Leonard Street Gallery (0)
Video: The best of Mutate Britain (0)
Video: Sickboy – Stay Free (2)


Not street art but…we like it.

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
“A celebration of creative talents living and working in London today”, nice. More info at Chapter One.

Related posts

George Morris at the Schwartz gallery (0)
Genesis at Chapter One gallery (0)
War Pen at The Leonard Street Gallery (0)
Video: The best of Mutate Britain (0)
Video: Sickboy – Stay Free (2)


Hush at Urban Angel

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
A few tasty pieces are now beginning to leak out of the Hush vault ahead of his show that opens this coming Thursday (November 12) at Urban Angel. As well as the originals pictured here, there’s a whole load of others, plus Urban Angel will also be releasing 4 prints which are exclusively available at [...]


Hush at Urban Angel

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
A few tasty pieces are now beginning to leak out of the Hush vault ahead of his show that opens this coming Thursday (November 12) at Urban Angel. As well as the originals pictured here, there’s a whole load of others, plus Urban Angel will also be releasing 4 prints which are exclusively available at [...]


Art In Progress

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

It's been a while since I've updated you on the progress of my own work. I've started experimenting with preparing different photo emulsions and my new screens, and not as successfully as I'd first hoped. I managed to track down a printer who can make A1 tracing paper prints (transparencies) for the process, although they did manage to crease just about everything in the post. I've also realised that my coating trough is just too narrow to complete this stage of the print run.

Anyway here's a few shots of an early attempt at Black Christ, it's the black ink layer screen, I didn't even get to try out a print yet as you can see the image runs too close to the edge and has deteriorated under the jet washer. A real shame as I was so looking forward to getting started!

The light areas are actually caused by camera flash.
Black Christ (Black) Screen

As you can see I'll need a wider coating trough, I'm clipping the sides of the image as it is. What's more the emulsion I was using was far too thick, I've bought another tub, this time a brand I remember using at East Dalston's Print Club. Here's a close up of the main offending area, where the worst deterioration took place. I basically over washed it, mainly because it never really exposed.

Thin Emulsion Washout

However, in the areas where there was enough emulsion the detail is perfect!
Perfect Eye of Black Christ

Still I've learned a few lessons, I need 1 min 25 seconds rather than the advised 55 seconds stated in the emulsion literature. I also need thinner emulsion (which I now have) so it doesn't settle so thick, will dry quickly and won't need as much washing out.

Still for me it's exciting stuff, not as exciting as actually getting on with the printing (lol) but I'm keeping my fingers crossed Black Christ will be available for sale for Christmas, which is ironically rather apt.

Anyway, in the meantime I've been working on a couple of ideas for Spunky.co.uk, a rather cool Brit t-shirt brand I've designed for before. I'm in two minds about these illustrations though, both based on old WW2 propaganda posters, they maybe a little too political for the label. We will see.

Democracy

Democracy T-Shirt Design Proposal by Paul Baines
A reinterpretation of an old Soviet era propaganda piece, a self explanatory comment on the state of modern life and the conflicts between the ideals of corporate capitalism and true democracy.

Nuke Model

Nuke Model T-Shirt Design Proposal by Paul Baines
I've experimented with a more painterly style for this design. Essentially it's a play on the words 'Nude Model', and comments on the distraction techniques most governments employ at times of crisis. I realise I've been working more and more graphically in order to be able to create screen prints. However in the long term I'd like to start painting a few canvases again.

Next week I'll start on the Black Christ screens again, hopefully (at least) one colour layer of the 48 limited edition prints will be complete by the next weekend.  Once it's ready I'll be removing the option for digital prints, which will apply to all my works from now on. I'll keep you posted no matter what happens next lol.

Tags: black christ, limited edition prints, Paul Baines, screen printing, t-shirt design

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Blu’s Sketchbook

Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

In February of 2006, Sara and I traveled through Italy leading up to attending the Winter Olympics in Torino. As we often do when we travel, we posted a note on the Wooster website saying that we’d love to meet up with local artists in Milan, Florence, and Rome.

On February 9th, when we arrived in Milan, we posted a note on the site letting people know that we’d all be meeting at the statue in the Piazza Duomo. We had no idea who – and how many – people would show up.

It turned out to be an amazing evening. Amongst the twenty-five or so people who joined us was Blu. He had traveled by train from his hometown in Bologna earlier that morning. It was the first time we had ever met Blu, and Sara and I were delighted that he had come all the way just to see us.

At the end of the night, Blu handed us a small wooden box. He told us that inside was one of his sketchbooks. He said that each week he did a new sketchbook and that he wanted us to have the one he had just completed. Sara and I were blown away by his thoughtfulness and ever since it’s been one of our favorite gifts. Not just for the wonderful drawings inside but for the intimacy of the gift itself.

The other week Blu came over for dinner and we showed a few friends the sketchbook. It occurred to us that because it’s a book in a box and not something to hang on a wall, very few people will actually get to see it. So this morning Sara and I did a short video “tour” of the book. We hope you like it as much as we do….