Monday, June 24, 2013
Into The Dark
For those of you who couldn’t make it out to check out Into The Dark, a group exhibition in Newcastle’s Victoria Tunnel presented by Unit 44, here are some photos to give you an idea of what the experience was like. Artists Candice Tripp, D*Face, Eelus, Faith47, Hendrik Beikirch, Hush, Meggs, Pedro Matos, Shepard Fairey, Stormie Mills, Will Barras, and Word to Mother provided work for the unusual event as attendees traveled into the depths for their night of art enjoyment. If anyone would like to see the PDF from the show please email Danny@unit-44.com.
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Kst; KYONG
ကြၽႏု္ပ္ ၏ အ ေတြး
ေၾကာ င္ , ေၾကာင္
ေၾကာ င္ ေတာ့ ေၾကာင္
အားလုံးေၾကာင္
အ ေမႊး ထူ တဲ့ သ ေဌး
လူ ေၾကာင္
အ ေၾကြး ထူ တဲ့
င ေပြး လူ ေၾကာင္
ဆ တိ န္း လန္း ရဲ့ CHAT NOIR ေၾကာင္ ႏွဲ႕ ဟို ကပ္ ပါး ေၾကာင္
ဂ်ာ မ နီ
ေၾကာင္ တဲ့ နာဇီေၾကာင္
ျမန္ မာ ျပည္ ရဲ့
ေတာ္ လွန္ ေၾကာင္ ႏွဲ႕ ေမာ္ ဒန္ ေၾကာင္
စစ္ ျငိမ္း ေအး ရဲ့
အ ေမွာင္ ထဲ က ေၾကာင္
က်ီး ေယာင္ ေဆာင္
တဲ့ ေၾကာင္
ၾကြက္ ျဖစ္ သြား တဲ့
ေၾကာင္
အ ေျခာက္ တိုက္ အ
ေျမာက္ ၾကိဳက္ တဲ့ ေၾကာင္
တစ္ က်ပ္ မ ျပည္႔
တဲ့ မတ္ ေစ႔ ေၾကာင္
လည္ ဂ တုံး ေၾကာင္ က
မိုက္ ခ ရို ဖုန္း ေၾကာင္ ကို ေညာင္
ပ ရို ပို ဆယ္ ေအာင္
တဲ့ ဟို ဆို ရွယ္ လူ ေၾကာင္
လူ ဝတ္ ေၾကာင္ နဲ႕
လူ အ လစ္ မွာ ယူ ဝတ္ တဲ့ ေၾကာင္
ၾကိဳး တန္း ေလွ်ာက္
တဲ့ ေၾကာင္ နဲ႕ ရိုး ရိုး တန္း ေအာက္က ေၾကာင္
ေဟာင္ တဲ့ ေၾကာင္ က
ေဟာင္
ေညာင္ တဲ့ ေၾကာင္ က
ေညာင္
ေဟ့
န ယူး ေယာက္ က ငါ အ
စြန္း ေရာက္ ေၾကာင္
KST. 23 Jun 2013
Friday, June 21, 2013
Work in Progress
Coming later this week, the Above Second Gallery in Hong Kong will be curating a group exhibition featuring Vhils, Cyrcle, Meggs, Rone, Cannonball Press, Victor Ash, and Beastman. With some artists already in town doing their part (see Vhils above and below) and more artists scheduled to arrive soon, the show hosted in an empty building owned by Swire Properties (13th Floor, Somerset House, Taikoo Place, Island East) is taking shape as we speak, which speaks to its title – Work In Progress. It will be nice to check out the collaborative and individual installations and work when the show opens to the public on June 17th.
Photo credit: Layla Kawashima for Arrested Motion.
Discuss Vhils here.
Monday, June 17, 2013
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Monday, June 10, 2013
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Colorful Character Jim Avignon Paints in Brazil.
Today we have photos from two new projects by Berlin based Street Artist and fine artist and Renaissance man Jim Avignon that he just completed in the southern hemisphere.
São Paulo, Brazil
As part of a cultural exchange project for the Goethe Institute, Avignon and Brazilian graffiti/fine artist Carlos Dias (aka ASA) painted the exterior and interior of a truck that will be traveling throughout the streets of many cities for a year to do educational classes and workshops with children in different neighborhoods. “I don’t speak Portugese and he doesn’t speak a lot in English but it wasn’t really necessary,” says Jim as he describes the planning and painting they did for a week or so inside a large warehouse before its debut. Aside from a map on the back that shows all the cities the truck with tour, he says it has “all kinds of cultural stuff inside; a small library, a public address system, film and music equipment.”Speaking of music, its notable that both of these visual artists have solid track records in composing, recording, and performing as musicians. Jim said he really enjoyed painting with ASA even though they didn’t talk a lot because the both of them also have experience performing music live in front of an audience and they felt like they really understood each other on that level. It all sort of culminated at the opening party in front of an old theatre. Jim said he felt right at home with ASA because, “He also has a band and likes to jump around on stage.”
Jim Avignon and Carlos Dias collaborate on a traveling arts education truck for Goethe Institute. A map on the back shows all the cities the truck will be taking its programs to over the next year. (image © Jim Avignon)
Jim Avignon and Carlos Dias collaborate on a traveling arts education truck for Goethe Institute (image © Jim Avignon)
The artists pose with their truck. (image © Jim Avignon)
Friday, June 7, 2013
The White Temple aka. Wat Rong Khun
To call the The White Temple aka Wat Rong Khun ‘unconventional’ is the understatement of the century. Located just outside of Chiang Rai in Northern Thailand, this temple experience is the closest thing you could ever come to hallucinating sober. This is a modern temple, completely unorthodox and creatively crazy. Elements of pop culture merge with images of devils, aliens and the pits of hell show how inclusive the creator of the temple has attempted to be.
Construction began in the late 1990s, but areas of the facade are still blank slates ready to be covered. No matter how that turns out, the white temple is unlike any Buddhist temple in the world. In fact, although worshippers come here daily, this is more of an elaborate art project than a devotion to the Buddha.
The temple was designed by popular contemporary Thai artist Chaloemchai Khositphiphat. Aware of how rare his project would be, Khositphiphat was prepared for the work to take years to finish, likening the project to Gaudi’s work in Spain. It’s been 14 years since the project started, so regardless of the comparison being slightly arrogant, it would appear to be true. Some of the work is beautiful, other aspects are disturbing to say the least.
Pictures are prohibited once inside the temple, but let us paint you a picture: The Buddha faces the back wall, which is painted orange and depicts a bizarre combination of scenes straight from American life: Spiderman, Superman, Alien, Star Wars, cell phones, computers, McDonald’s, Neo from The Matrix movies, Bin Laden and George W. Bush, plus the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers. Not what you would expect inside a temple! Even parts of the small main temple were unfinished, so we can only imagine what type of images will be added to mix!
How to get there: The temple is located in Ban Rong Khun, about 13 kilometres south-west of Chiang Rai. Public buses (40 Baht) leave regularly from the bus station in Chiang Rai, just ask someone what gate the buses to Wat Rong Khun are leaving from. The ride takes around 20 minutes.
Construction began in the late 1990s, but areas of the facade are still blank slates ready to be covered. No matter how that turns out, the white temple is unlike any Buddhist temple in the world. In fact, although worshippers come here daily, this is more of an elaborate art project than a devotion to the Buddha.
The temple was designed by popular contemporary Thai artist Chaloemchai Khositphiphat. Aware of how rare his project would be, Khositphiphat was prepared for the work to take years to finish, likening the project to Gaudi’s work in Spain. It’s been 14 years since the project started, so regardless of the comparison being slightly arrogant, it would appear to be true. Some of the work is beautiful, other aspects are disturbing to say the least.
Pictures are prohibited once inside the temple, but let us paint you a picture: The Buddha faces the back wall, which is painted orange and depicts a bizarre combination of scenes straight from American life: Spiderman, Superman, Alien, Star Wars, cell phones, computers, McDonald’s, Neo from The Matrix movies, Bin Laden and George W. Bush, plus the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers. Not what you would expect inside a temple! Even parts of the small main temple were unfinished, so we can only imagine what type of images will be added to mix!
How to get there: The temple is located in Ban Rong Khun, about 13 kilometres south-west of Chiang Rai. Public buses (40 Baht) leave regularly from the bus station in Chiang Rai, just ask someone what gate the buses to Wat Rong Khun are leaving from. The ride takes around 20 minutes.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Sitt Nyein Aye
Sitt Nyein Aye came from a small village, near Nyaung-U Township in Upper Myanmar. He was born Sein Aye to Daw Than Swe and U Tun Pe. His parents were farmers with no money for education. Monks in the village monastery provided the resources needed for him to attend high school. He secretly studied modern art but this was frowned on by his teachers, being dubbed "mad art". He failed to achieve the top prize that would have allowed him to study abroad. Instead he lived on the streets and sold artworks to passers-by.
Sitt Nyein Aye spent two months in custody for sketching the ruins of a student union that had been blown up by Ne Win in 1962.As a supporter of the pro-democracy movement in Burma, he has lived in exile in India.
He changed his name to Sitt Nyein Aye, which means War and Peace, after reading the novel by Leo Tolstoy, in his twenties.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitt_Nyein_Aye
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5i_6u5ybp3g
Sitt Nyein Aye spent two months in custody for sketching the ruins of a student union that had been blown up by Ne Win in 1962.As a supporter of the pro-democracy movement in Burma, he has lived in exile in India.
He changed his name to Sitt Nyein Aye, which means War and Peace, after reading the novel by Leo Tolstoy, in his twenties.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitt_Nyein_Aye
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5i_6u5ybp3g
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