Category Archives: Photograph

Banksy NYC Art Day #14: Low Brow?

Another day another Banksy. This month is truly an overflow of riches. No way to predict what Banksy will do before he does it.

20131014-080839.jpg

On his website Banksy writes:

Some people criticize me for using sources that are a bit low brow (this quote is from ‘Gladiator’) but you know what? “I’m just going to use that hostility to make me stronger, not weaker” as Kelly Rowland said on the X Factor.

Banksy Tries (And Mostly Fails) To Sell Original Banksy Art In Central Park

banksy 13-1

The mysterious street artist Banksy says he set up a stall in Central Park yesterday, October 12, 2013, and with original signed Banksy art for sale at $60 a piece and had few takers.

That’s insane.

Hey Banksy, I’m in California, but if I’d been in NYC and seen your stall I’d have bought some of the pieces. A few years ago I was at Venice Beach and someone had a stall with t-shirts with some of your art on them and some small canvases with your art on them as well and they looked great and I bought a t-shirt and two of the pieces, which I dig the most.

Feel free to contact me if you want to unload some of those unsold canvases.

Anyway, here’s what’s on Banksy’s website:

Yesterday I set up a stall in the park selling 100% authentic original signed Banksy canvases.
For $60 each.

The artist also says:

Please note: This was a one off. The stall will not be there again today.

Source For Banksy’s “Concrete Confessional” Revealed

banksy  overlay
Original photo taken in the ’50s overlaid with Banksy’s “Concrete Confessional.

Check this out. On the Animal blog, we learn:

Antigrav appears to have tracked down the source image for this stencil [“Concrete Confessioinal”].

PRIEST_MAIN_IMAGE-private-1
“Concrete Confessional” by Banksy.

The [black and white] photo was shot by famed lensman Berni Schoenfield in the 1950s and was posted as the “Photograph of the Day” by The Telegraph in 2009. According to the paper, it depicts a Jesuit priest at the Martyr’s Shrine in Ontario:

Taken in 1955, near Midland in Ontario, this photograph shows a Jesuit priest hearing confession at a site commemorating the first missionaries in Huron county. They arrived in 1626 intending to convert the Iriquois but were martyred ten years later.

Banksy NYC Day #11: Taking On Factory Farming With “The Sirens of the Lambs”

With his latest art piece, a slaughterhouse delivery truck driving around New York’s “Meatpacking District” jammed with stuffed animals and what sounds like the fearful cries of animals, Banksy takes aim at meat eating. He makes the direct connection between living animals and how we kill them and eat their dead flesh. And our connection to the animals. A video posted on Banky’s site (see below) ends with a shot of a baby in a stroller crying.

bank 10-1

The Sirens of the Lambs, Banksy writes on his website. “A slaughterhouse delivery truck touring the meatpacking district and then citywide for the next two weeks.”

bank 10-2

Audio guide to today’s artwork:




Be sure to check out this video:

Banksy NYC Art Day #10: The Decline Of The Modern World?

As the weekend approaches Banksy follows his huge political work of Day #9 with this art work located in “East New York,” according to Banksy, which is more modest but chilling in its own way.

Banksy said this in his Village Voice interview:

“New York calls to graffiti writers like a dirty old lighthouse. We all want to prove ourselves here. I chose it for the high foot traffic and the amount of hiding places. Maybe I should be somewhere more relevant, like Beijing or Moscow, but the pizza isn’t as good.”

No audio today.

baksy 10-1

banksy 10 - 2

Bob Dylan App For iPhone, iPad Released And It’s Free

dylan-bootleg-app

The Bob Dylan Bootleg app for iPhone and iPad has been released. If you’ve got Dylan’s Another Self Portrait on your ios device, the app provides video interviews about the songs, biographical info about artists who Dylan influenced or who influenced Dylan, lyric and track info and more.

More info about it here.

For now it only works with Another Self Portrait but according to the app, soon info will be available for all of the Bootleg series albums.

Download for free here.

Banksy NYC Day #9: Crazy Rearing Horses With Goggles, Political Commentary

More street art from Banksy. What a day. You can read some of his thoughts about his New York street art exhibit and check out the new work which is quite political.

bank 9 -2

Banksy provided some horrific audio today. Military in the middle east?




And some video:

Art: Village Voice Lands Banksy Interview: “It doesn’t take much to be a successful artist—all you need to do is dedicate your entire life to it.”

day-07-2

Following the first week of Banksy’s New York “Better Out Than In” street art show, the mysterious British artist has granted an email interview with the Village Voice.

“There is absolutely no reason for doing this show at all,” Banksy told the Voice. “I know street art can feel increasingly like the marketing wing of an art career, so I wanted to make some art without the price tag attached. There’s no gallery show or book or film. It’s pointless. Which hopefully means something.”

The artist says he is currently living in New York.

“The plan is to live here, react to things, see the sights—and paint on them,” he wrote. “Some of it will be pretty elaborate, and some will just be a scrawl on a toilet wall.”

Is Banksy defacing his own art? No, he says.

“I’m not defacing my own pictures, no,” he told the Voice. “I used to think other graffiti writers hated me because I used stencils, but they just hate me.”

And what about those audio clips that mock museum audio guides?

“The audio guide started as a cheap joke, and to be honest that’s how it’s continued, but I’m starting to see more potential in it now,” Banksy told the Voice. “I like how it controls the time you spend looking at an image. I read that researchers at a big museum in London found the average person looked at a painting for eight seconds. So if you put your art at a stoplight you’re already getting better numbers than Rembrandt.”

Most interesting is Banksy’s comments about maintaining credibility as a street artist. He said he made a “mistake” when, for his last New York show, he didn’t create the artwork himself.

“I totally overlooked how important it was to do it myself,” he wrote. “Graffiti is an art form where the gesture is at least as important as the result, if not more so. I read how a critic described Jackson Pollock as a performance artist who happened to use paint, and the same could be said for graffiti writers—performance artists who happen to use paint. And trespass.”

And more:

“I started painting on the street because it was the only venue that would give me a show,” he wrote. “Now I have to keep painting on the street to prove to myself it wasn’t a cynical plan. Plus it saves money on having to buy canvases.

“But there’s no way round it—commercial success is a mark of failure for a graffiti artist,” he continued. “We’re not supposed to be embraced in that way. When you look at how society rewards so many of the wrong people, it’s hard not to view financial reimbursement as a badge of self-serving mediocrity.”

My favorite part of the interview are these comments about surviving as an artist — and success.

“Obviously people need to get paid—otherwise you’d only get vandalism made by part-timers and trust-fund kids,” Banksy wrote. “But it’s complicated, it feels like as soon as you profit from an image you’ve put on the street, it magically transforms that piece into advertising. When graffiti isn’t criminal, it loses most of its innocence.

“It seems to me the best way to make money out of art is not to even try,” he wrote. “It doesn’t take much to be a successful artist—all you need to do is dedicate your entire life to it. The thing people most admired about Picasso wasn’t his work/life balance.”

For the whole story, go to the Voice.

Art? Jeff Koons Does Lady Gaga Nude

o-ARTPOP-570

Artist Jeff Koons has created a ‘sculpture’ of Lady Gaga that will appear on the cover of her new and third album, ARTPOP.

Somehow this is far less exciting than Andy Warhol’s association with the Velvet Underground, or his brilliant cover for the Rolling Stones’ Sticky Fingers. Koons is mentioned in Lady Gaga’s “Applause” (watch below if you must).

Koons previous sculpture of a pop figure is a horrendous depiction of Michael Jackson and Bubbles.

bubbles