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Showing posts with label tattoo-inspired. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tattoo-inspired. Show all posts

Drill Baby, A Narratively Tattooed Infant From Jason Clay Lewis.




Artist Jason Clay Lewis, whose unusual work I have blogged about before when I featured his Drop Dead Gorgeous exhibit and his wonderful engraved bullets, has given birth to yet another compelling project.



His "Drill Baby" (the name of which is undoubtedly a nod to Sarah Palin's oddly foreboding rallying cry "Drill, Baby, Drill") is a lifelike infant tatted with the victims and the symbolic perpetrators of the horrendous BP offshore drilling disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.


above: Drill Baby and detail, Jason Clay Lewis, 2010. 18 1/4" x 9 1/4" x 6 3/4"

Made with vinyl rubber, mohair, oil paint, plaster and aluminum armature, the hyper realistic-looking newborn seems to sleep blissfully and innocently as the images on his body tell us another story.




The infant has artfully drawn tattoos of some of the tragic oil spill's most innocent victims - Pelicans and Seagulls - along with the clicheƩd tattoo imagery of Koi, swimming in blackened waters, aligning his arms.




On his right inner thigh is a clipper ship (a recurring theme in Jason's work representing plagues), complete with floating oil barrels and an idyllic deserted island blackened by an oil spill. An Eagle or Falcon, in the midst of attack made, talons exposed, swoops in on the infants left inner thigh.



Least subtle, is the image of a religious figure (the Virgin Mary is another icon the repeatedly appears in Jason's work) grasping a dripping gas nozzle, the representation of the product that is at the core of the political, economical and ecological tragedy. Notice that the infant's nipple becomes her breast.



Jason Clay Lewis' work often combines fetishes and death with religious symbolism. The artist currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Jason Clay Lewis

Tiki, Tatts & Skulls. Lionel Scoccimaro's Go Big Or Go Home.



above: detail from BJ&SS White Jar

The talented contemporary artist and photographer Lionel Scoccimaro had an exhibit titled Go Big Or Go Home earlier this year at the Carpenters Workshop Gallery. If you missed it, don't fret, I'm bringing it to you here.



from the gallery press release:
Go Big or Go Home is a phrase urging extravagance with an all or nothing response, indicating a desire to live life to the fullest. Here it showcases Scoccimaro’s appropriation of kitsch and popular culture, melding them with fine art techniques. The glossy, surface details and oversized objects may be perceived as whimsical or playful touches but allude to darker realities and offer unsettling social commentary. Whilst the works can initially be interpreted as a series of representations and coded imagery – human skulls, decorative medieval lances, over-sized jars – on deeper reflection, they are more polysemic in nature.



With visual references and material techniques associated with biker/surf culture, the work alludes to exotic Tiki imagery and neo-Voodoo culture, which were prominent elements in the American surf scene of the 1950s and 60s. But the laid-back lifestyle intimated by adopting this imagery reminds viewers of the appropriation and destruction of culture— humanoid Tiki figures have been worn away to skulls and stylized flames consume customs. It is this multi - layering of messages that makes Scoccimaro’s work so appealing, instantly absorbing and divisive.

Scoccimaro purposefully adopts a diminutive role in his attack on the norms of High Art with a visual language of codified adult - gameplaying. It is at this junction, a symbiosis of diverse popular traditions, that easy categorization of his works is disabled. His works reach back to his sentimental nostalgia of a by-gone era of counter-cultures that have been diluted by globalization and ready-accessibility.

Horizontal Rack features gleaming aluminium skulls peering down at the audience with sinister intent and ominous allusions.


above: Horizontal Rack, 2009 / H 160 L 220 W 35 cm / Beech and aluminium

The Horizontal Rack suggests a well-stocked medieval arsenal with pole arms or seemingly innocuous quarterstaffs. Elaborately carved and individually mounted, the sticks calls to mind a gruesome Baroque collection or a Victorian cabinet of medical curiosities based on the desire to classify human life and death, forcing them into grotesque spectacles for prurient curiosity. It also evokes the legend of a Haitian Voodoo implement, the coco macaque or sorcerer’s stick, which has the power to move on its own and complete sinister errands for its master.


above: Horizontal Rack, detail

Removed from the rack, the poles place users in the bizarre position of holding skulls, putting them in intimate contact with beautifully manufactured death and decay.

Small Jar
, a curvaceous pot with five tall sticks jutting from its aperture, is theatrical in its presence and imbued with irony. This sculptural piece hints at an abstract view of ‘flowers in a vase’ yet with a more provocative and menacing intention.



The decorative poles appear like weapons waiting to be plucked for use while warped in reflection on the glossy surface of the jar, the protruding sticks appear like vertebrae.


above: Small Jar, 2009 / H 130 L 85 W 85 cm / Beech, aluminium, car paint and varnish

The demand of Scoccimaro to fulfil his role as sculptor coupled with formal efficacy leads him to articulate a discussion of materials and size-scales in his work. Scoccimaro’s work plays with these appropriations, using contemporary society’s interest in clever, self-referential irony and post-modernism to hint at how the darker elements of our past can catch up with us in the present. He offers us provoking insights wrapped in glossy, playful packages of pop-age veneers.

The stunningly smooth and conical Customised Soliflor dominates over people who enter its space. As tall as an average person, it is not merely a decorative object but a presence in its own right. The red flame motif, borrowed from customised vehicles and universe of skating, surfing and biking, heightens the theatricality of the piece and questions the preciousness associated with gallery objects.


above: Customised Soliflor 2009 / H230 L110 W110cm / Resin, aluminium, car paint and varnish


BJ&SS/ White Jar:

above: White Jar, 2009, H 185 L 120 W 120 cm, Resin, beech, aluminium, car paint and varnish

Vertical Rack:

above: Vertical Rack, 2009, H185 L85 W45cm, Beech and aluminium

BJ&SSn°3/8/02071/5 - Jar:


above: 2007, H 190 L 95 W 95 cm, Crystal resin, varnish, cast aluminum and beech

Go Big Or Go Home:

above: 2009, W 80 cm, Neon tube light, plexiglass

Elvis Is My Co-pilot:

above: 2009, W 80 cm, Neon tube light, plexiglass

About Lionel Scoccimaro

Marseille - based sculptor, surfer and biker Lionel Scoccimaro explores the ways in which globalisation brings the margins from what was once counterculture—surfing, skateboarding, motorcycling — to the centre. The iconoclasts who break with cherished values and traditions have become the style icons, the people society aspires to emulate. His work bridges the gap between ‘low culture’ and the high art world. Scoccimaro was singled out during FIAC in Paris for his series of giant ‘Toppling Toys’ decorated with symbols of American counterculture. Since 2001 his work has commented upon and manipulated social expectations through the medium of photography and sculpture. Scoccimaro’s sculptural and photographic works have been exhibited at Ecole SupĆ©rieure des Arts et de la Communication in Pau, Chapelle Saint Jacques in St-Gaudens, the VF gallery in Marseille, Roger Pailhas Gallery in Marseille, Stedelijk musuem Aalst in Belgium and Fabrice Marcolini gallery in Toronto

About the Carpenters Workshop Gallery:
Carpenters Workshop Gallery extends the boundaries of design by uniting and transcending the contested categories of conceptual/functional and design/art in thought - provoking exhibitions.

The gallery presents established artists such as Marc Quinn, Atelier van Lieshout, Ron Arad, Wendell Castle, Maarten Baas, Ingrid Donat and encourages the talent of an up-and-coming generation: Sebastian Brajkovic, Robert Stadler, Pablo Reinoso, Demakersvan, Xavier Lust, Vincent Dubourg and Mathieu Lehanneur. Based in Mayfair at 3 Albemarle

information and images courtesy of the Carpenters Workshop Gallery


Carpenters Workshop Gallery
3 Albemarle Street,
London W1S 4HE
t +44 (0)20 3051 5939
f +44 (0)20 3051 5933
www.cwgdesign.com

Tattoo Artist Scott Campbell Designs Bags & Inks Models For Louis Vuitton





Gucci has already introduced a Tattoo-inspired collection of handbags and Chanel introduced their temporary tattoos, so it's no surprise that luxury brand Louis Vuitton has jumped on the tattwagon.

The LVMH company has collaborated with artist and tattoo master Scott Campbell to design some men's bags for the Louis Vuitton 2011 Spring Summer Men's collection. In addition to the leather bags which feature tattoo-inspired images, Scott Campbell also decorated the runway models for the show with temporary tattoos in the form of LV logos and with the same dragon and flourishes he used as imagery on the bags.

The Bags:



detail:






detail:


The Louis Vuitton Tattoos
The tattoos that graced the model's necks, arms and legs are the same designs as Scott incorporated into the leather bags for Louis Vuitton:






Scott, who has received much online attention for his cut-up currency art, is personal friends with Marc Jacobs, the fashion designer and Creative Director for Louis Vuitton. Jacobs sports several of Scott's tatts (both Marc and Scott have his "Bros before Hos" tattoos), so it's no wonder he chose him to design a few pieces and ink the models for the show.


above: Marc Jacobs of Louis Vuitton and artist Scott Campbell backstage at the runway show

Louis Vuitton
images are courtesy of the artist, ilvoelv.com and, with runway photos by Monica Feudi and Gianni Pucci for Style.com.

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