Richard Hambleton – RIP

Richard Hambleton, an artist credited with inspiring Banksy, passed away this week from unknown causes just days before his MoMA show and a month before the release of Shadowman, a new film about his life and work. Here’s an article about him from earlier this year.


The epic rise and disgusting flameout of the artist who ruled 80s New York
by Raquel Laneri
New York Post
April 15, 2017

In the early 1980s, a series of shadowy street paintings “” life-size monsters and cowboys “” loomed large over the East Village. Anticipating the works of Banksy by more than a decade, the unsigned figures were created under cover of darkness on buildings and bridges. They weren”™t mere graffiti, but painterly works reminiscent of Jackson Pollock. Downtown residents buzzed about who could be behind them.

The art world knew who it was: a soft-spoken Canadian “” often clad in a cravat and sunglasses “” named Richard Hambleton.

At downtown galleries, his mysterious figures fetched thousands of dollars more than work by his friends Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring. He attended parties with beautiful women on his arm, and Andy Warhol begged him, in vain, to sit for a portrait.

Hambleton canvased Manhattan with some 450 shadow men “” and managed to get a few on the Berlin Wall, too. But by the 1990s, he was largely forgotten, living in a drug den on the Lower East Side. He was so poor that he would shoot himself up with heroin, then use the blood in his needle as paint. Read more here.

Sim Cities

Photographer Gregor Sailer’s new book focuses on incredibly detailed, entirely uninhabited, completely fake urban landscapes.


“These Cities Might Look Real But They’re 100% Fake”
By Laura Mallonee
Wired
October 25, 2017

Junction City has all the trappings of an Iraqi town: a brightly painted mosque; shops adorned with Arabic script; the occasional humvee or tank rumbling by. But you won”™t find it anywhere near Mosul. It’s a stage set at Fort Irwin, in the middle of California”™s Mojave Desert, where US troops simulate fighting insurgents.

“It”™s a lonely place, full of buildings no one will ever live in,” says photographer Gregor Sailer. “It”™s like a ghost city””the wind smashing the doors, blowing through the streets.”

Sailer captured Junction City and 21 other fake urban landscapes for his fascinating new book The Potemkin Village. They include a New York-themed town in Sweden built to test cars for road safety; a Russian city with elaborate facades disguising forlorn buildings; and a Dutch hamlet in China that tourists visit for a taste of Europe. “Sometimes they”™re more real and other times they”™re more an illusion,” Sailer says. “I”™m jumping between these two worlds, and that”™s what makes it exciting for me.” Read more.

Improv Everywhere: Declare Your Love

From Charlie Todd of Improv Everywhere:


Declare Your Love

share_the_love

For our latest mission, we constructed a custom wooden lectern with a megaphone holster and an attached sign that read, “Declare Your Love.” The lectern was placed at the corner of 6th Avenue and 42nd Street at the entrance to Bryant Park and then left alone. We wanted to see what would happen if New Yorkers were given the opportunity to amplify their voices and declare their love.

Enjoy the video first and then go behind the scenes with our mission report and photos.

More from Improv Everywhere:

The Emporer Has No Balls

Update from thetab.com about artist, Ginger (thanks Sal): Meet the sculptor behind the naked Donald Trump statues


A Cleveland-based group, INDECLINE, erected flacid Trump statues overnight in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Cleveland and Seattle.

INDECLINE Trump Statue by Ginger

Wall Street Journal reporter Josh Dawsey tweeted the New York City Parks Department comment about the statue’s removal:

Jack Dawsey tweet

Watch the “making of” video:


thisisindecline.com
Artist: Ginger
Original Score: Ryder Reynolds

Read more here, here, and here. Thanks Nancy.


Banksy’s Dismaland Theme Park Opens

Channel 4 News reports, August 20, 2016:

Banksy’s “family theme park unsuitable for small children” has opened on the Weston-super-Mare seafront. It features migrant boats, dead princesses and Banksy’s trademark dark humour.

The park features Banksy’s artistry as well as works by 50 other artists including Damien Hirst and Jenny Holzer.

Buzzfeed published these photos:

Banksy's Dismaland: Little Mermaid
Dismaland is a five-week show housed inside and around a derelict Tropicana building in Weston-super-Mare, a seaside town in Somerset, England. Photo by Christopher Jobson for Colossal
Banksy's Dismaland theme park Seaworld-like attraction. Christopher Jobson for Colossal
Banksy’s Dismaland theme park Seaworld-like attraction. Christopher Jobson for Colossal
Banksy's tanker truck disaster at Dismaland. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Tanker truck disaster in Banksy’s Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Grim reaper on bumper cars at Banksy's Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Grim reaper on bumper cars at Banksy’s Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Radio controlled refugee boat game at Banksy's Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Radio controlled refugee boat game at Banksy’s Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Pigeon hazard at Banksy's Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE
Pigeon hazard at Banksy’s Dismaland theme park. Yui Mok / PA WIRE

Banksy’s theme? According the BBC he said, “”I guess you’d say it’s a theme park whose big theme is ‘theme parks should have bigger themes’.”

Read more about what Banksy describes as a “family theme park unsuitable for children” at BBC.com and at Huffington Post.