Masterpiece 2.0, a social media art project by Baschz and Selfcontrolfreak.
So much fun to see our daughter Samantha make her cameo in Baschz and Selfcontrolfreak’s wonderful social media art project, Masterpiece 2.0.
Thanks guys!
by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective
Masterpiece 2.0, a social media art project by Baschz and Selfcontrolfreak.
So much fun to see our daughter Samantha make her cameo in Baschz and Selfcontrolfreak’s wonderful social media art project, Masterpiece 2.0.
Thanks guys!
by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective
We absolutely loved this street intervention project in which the artists the altered public lighting in Tel Aviv’s open underground tunnels.
Artists Bar&Shay said their street art muse was Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz as they altered the tunnel from this….

to this….


by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective
A few weeks ago, Vhils showed us a rough cut of a short film he was making about new work he was doing in Portugal. We were blown away, not just by the piece but also from how exquisitely is was filmed.
This morning Vhils put the final film up on Youtube. We love the film and the text that goes with it:
Scratching the Surface
“Sous les pavés, la plage!” (Beneath the paving stones – the beach!) – Anonymous graffiti, Paris 1968.
Paris, May 1968. When the enragés started digging up the stones from the Boulevard St. Michel to use them as weapons against the forces of the old order, they came upon the sand that covered the surface underneath them. The earth. Beneath the concrete, the earth. Beneath the urban environment, nature. Beneath the artificial, life.
Behind all these brick and concrete walls, these dull, grey surfaces that condition our existence, behind all of these cities, there is life. There are individuals, there is nature. “Scratching the surface” is an act of creation taken from lifeless forms. It is the subversion of lifeless forms. The act of engraving the idea of life on a wall, of creating the image of an individual, an iconographic piece of representational symbolism that will endure. As if rendering him eternal by bringing him to life where life was not supposed to be. By carving it out of that which is still-born by its very nature, by its design.
So until the symbolical demise of all walls that separate, that impose, that condition, of a social system that overbuilds in order to control and perpetuate its grasp on the divisions that stem from this eternal partitioning and keep individuals in place, it will be easier and easier to forget who we are, where we come from and what nature is really all about. How easy it is to lose track of what our nature really is while caught amid this saturated, un-organic environment. “
Vhils is currently working on work for an upcoming solo show at Steve Lazarides’ new gallery on Rathbone Place, Fitzrovia. Vhils’ work is stunning in video and photos on the web, but nothing beats seeing the work first hand.
by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective
More from Sir X here.
by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective
Lucas Murgida at 667 Shotwell from Chris Sollars on Vimeo.
Lucas Murgida’s performances and public interventions is the type of “street art” that lately we’ve become fascinated with. If you’re not familiar with Lucas’ work, watch Chris Sollars’ video above.
by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective
Five ( Dramatic Pauses ) from Brendan Bell on Vimeo.
Artist Statement:
“We let the television news into the perceived safety of our lives on a daily basis. Even without direct contact, the language of the medium connects with us via background noise, internet blips, and watercooler small-talk. It has a distinct, and often overlooked, authority over the way we think and feel.
The nightly half-hour national news format attempts to condense the state of the world into easily digestible soundbites. My intention is to release these soundbites, inherent powers intact, realign them and force them to interact in unintended ways.
For seven months, I watched NBC Nightly News, recording phrases that piqued my interest. I focused on this single media outlet to give the project a specific voice and began reconfiguring the phrases into what can best be described as collage poems. Poetry, like the news media, uses evocative language to provide insight into the inner workings of the world. However, poetry allows subtleties and subtext to take center stage. The resulting collage poems highlight the ambiguous spaces between language and life, exposing the vagaries of the ostensibly concrete world around us.
The term (Dramatic Pause) implies a brief deviation from an intended script, or a small crack in real time, where things that are normally hidden become visible. It is based on instructions written for news broadcasters on their teleprompters.”
by on May 17, 2009 in Wooster Collective

There’s now an interactive Google map which documents all the different spots in New York that were part of last month’s amazing NYSAT project. If you’re unaware NYSAT, check the Public Ad Campaign website.
The map includes images of the sites that were painted white, images of the artwork that was created, web links, video footage, and personal stories.
Click here to check it out.
by admin on May 16, 2009 in Art & Perception
I just visited the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, where I saw, among other things, a couple of Rothko paintings and a Barnett Newman. Maybe that’s why this installment of the continuing Yellowstone day is more colorful than previous ones (see parts one and two).
I stopped at a favorite spot …
by on May 15, 2009 in Wooster Collective
We have mixed feelings about the new Taki 183 website (It’s a bit too slick and “commercial” for our tastes) But one thing we did love is that you can download a PDF of the original New York Times article on Taki 183 from 1971 in the biography section.
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