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10 June: Prisma at Colab Gallery (DE)

Colab Gallery presents "Prisma" Group Exhibition

Artists:
Icy & Sot (IR) • Jaybo Monk (F)
Die_Cast (Zoer & Velvet) (F) • Enric Sant (ES)
Pastel (ARG) • Soda (IT)
Kostas Seremetis (USA) • Most (DE) • Lugosis (IT)

"Prisma" is opening on Saturday,
June 10th at 8 pm and we are looking forward
to seeing you there!

Am 10. Juni öffnet Colab Gallery Ihre Türen für “Prisma“
und wir möchten Dich hiermit herzlich zur Vernissage ab 20:00 Uhr einladen.

Wir freuen uns Ihnen die neuesten Arbeiten von:
Icy & Sot (IR) • Jaybo Monk (F)
Die_Cast (Zoer & Velvet) (F) • Enric Sant (ES)
Pastel (ARG) • Soda (IT)
Kostas Seremetis (USA) • Most (DE) • Lugosis (IT)
präsentieren zu dürfen.

KURATOR Stefan Winterle

Colab Gallery GmbH
Schusterinsel 9
79576 Weil am Rhein
Germany

See you there!
Wir sehen uns!

Fixed! No https/SSL issues here...

...carry on! With our webadmin on an awesome EU concert tour, Stencil Archive had a insecure moment. Thanks to tech help at my web hosting company, all is well. Strangely enough, the site that hosts my tours was down at the same time. It's back up, too.

Still not looking through https? Perhaps clear your browser cache/history.

Blame it on the alien overlords!

Juxtapoz Interview with Adam Feibelman

ADAM ELI FEIBELMAN
PERSONAL PROVENANCE
INTERVIEW for JUXTAPOZ BY ALEX NICHOLSON
Portrait photo by Alex Nicholson

Walking into Adam Feibelman’s studio is walking into a mess, a good mess, in that satisfying, artist-at-work kind of way. Surrounded by projects in various states of completion, scattered and stacked on every available surface, I was careful to avoid toppling the very large vase precariously filled to the brim with used X-Acto blades. On one visit, a bicycle wheel sat on a ladder in front of an old projector as Adam demonstrated how the shadows moved through the different patterns he cuts out. A few weeks later, I strolled in to find him making a silicone replica of the leg of the Hungarian camerawoman caught on film, tripping and kicking fleeing Syrian refugees. “The idea for a piece will come up, and for the most part, I’m able to execute it then and there,” he tells me. “I think it’s why I naturally gravitated towards art, but it took some time to figure out which ideas were worth pursuing.” While the stencil work is what Adam is most known for, his practice continually evolves in order to realize each new idea. The last time I stopped by, he took me through all the work for his upcoming exhibition, explaining how each piece inspires or was inspired by another. Personal Provenance, Adam’s first “straight-up conceptual show,” will address various topics related to migration, asking viewers to consider their own family’s journeys as they make their way through the space.

Alex Nicholson: What was your house like growing up? Were your parents creative people?
Adam Feibelman: My dad is a scientist and my mom was a fundraiser for a nonprofit. I would say that it was creative in that my parents are both stimulated by art, had art around and made a point of making sure my sister and I went to museums a lot. I think I caught on pretty early that my imagination and hands were connected. And my dad being a scientist, that’s actually a pretty creative thing.

What kind of science?
Physicist, surface science, which is the study of how molecules move on surfaces of materials. It can be applied to all kinds of things from waterproofing to friction and adhesives. My parents met in an opera group. They're very well-rounded people, I would say. They've got their hands in everything.

Do you recall the first moment, beyond coloring and making things as a kid, where you thought, "Oh, I think want to spend my life doing this."
You know, I don't know if I had that realization until I was way older. Actually, when I was a kid, I said I wanted to be a cartoonist or an architect.

Well, that's pretty close.
Yeah, for sure. But as I progressed through the Albuquerque Public Schools, I didn't really see a future in either one of those, even though I had been kind of making artwork since I was a kid. My parents were really good at making sure I was in art classes. When I was really young, I wanted to draw Garfield and Calvin and Hobbes. There's stuff at my parents' house they still have that I made when I was eight years old that I would own now as contemporary artwork [laughs]. One of them was a foam core replica of breakfast. It was a placemat with a napkin, a fork, a knife and a plate with eggs and bacon and toast on it. The placemat had a pattern, and they still have it. When I see it, I think, “Wow, whatever little kid made this was pretty good!” It wasn't until nearly failing in high school that my mom suggested maybe I should think about going to art school. That ended up being the way to go.

Did you get into graffiti in high school or in art school?
In high school I was much more into graffiti.

That's when the stenciling came in?
I would say, in high school, I was more of the character guy. I could do faces much better than I could do letters. But then again, Albuquerque had kind of a gnarly gang-associated graffiti world and there was a lot of machismo bullshit going around. When I had the opportunity to leave, I decided I would leave all of that behind as well, because I had nothing to prove. I still have nothing to prove... I think. Maybe I do. Maybe I'm proving it right now.

26 and 28 April: Jeremy Novy Workshop and Show (Minn, MN)

JEREMY NOVY Presents: Queer Street Art, Fighting for Legitimacy

Attention MPLS art lovers! The illustrious and fabulous street artist Jeremy Novy will be gracing our fair city with his talent this month! Jeremy has spent the better part of 2 decades painting San Francisco streets, heavily involved in queer art and stenciling sidewalks and pavement with his iconic koi fish, and work boot prints that depict a kiss between two men.

This 2 night event will coincide with his stencil workshop, please contact Amalgamated for more details on doing stencils with Mr. Novy!
($60 workshop)

26 and 28 APRIL

Wednesday, April 26 at 7 PM
MPLS Make & Take Stencil Workshop with
Jeremy Novy

Friday, April 28 at 7 PM
Jeremy Novy Presents:
Queer Street Art, Fighting for Legitimacy

Location
Amalgamated MPLS
720 CENTRAL AVE NE
MINNEAPOLIS 55413

April Showers... of Stencil Uploads

More stencil photos from around the world. Tunes by XTC. Vibes by Todd G.

<<< stencil by Street Dr. Dude (Hamburg)

>NEW< paperboyo (UK)

Eclair

fnnch (with a few in-progress shots)

In the Mission (thanks, Josiah, Esme)

In the Western Addition

In Clarion Alley

In the East Bay (thanks, Larry)

Facebook HQ, Menlo Park

Florida (just one, thanks, Daryl)

Swoon at Facebook HQ

One from London (thanks, Whitney)

The TXMX Files Continue

RUMO

>NEW< sei leilse

>NEW<  street dr. dude

>NEW< toiz

Just one in the Hamburg archive, by T.O.Z.

Street Artists Threaten McDonald’s with Lawsuit

Six Street Artists Threaten McDonald’s with Copyright Infringement Lawsuit

ARTSY EDITORIAL
BY ANNA LOUIE SUSSMAN
APR 19TH, 2017

In another chapter of 2017’s incredible streak of “multinational corporation tries to appeal to the kids; mayhem ensues” episodes, McDonald’s stands accused of copyright infringement and false endorsement for using the work of New York City graffiti artists in a promotional video entitled “McDonald’s Presents the Vibe of Bushwick NY.”

On Wednesday, lawyers representing six street artists sent a letter to the burger chain threatening legal action and seeking “compensation for damages to their work and reputation, as well as profits derived from McDonald’s unauthorized use of their artwork,” according to a statement released by their lawyer Andrew Gerber of Kushnirsky Gerber PLLC.

The burger chain hired six Bushwick-based street artists to paint its new bagel sandwich in public spaces around the Netherlands while being filmed, using that footage for an ad alongside the “Vibe” video. While the four-minute-long video focuses mostly on the hired artists, who are part of the Bushwick Collective group, work by many other street artists appears in the video without permission.

15 April: Adam Feibelman's Personal Provenance (SF, CA)

As artist Adam Feibelman found on a recent trip to walk the rugged trails traversing the border between Tucson and Nogales, the sharp divisions ingrained in national identities and our senses of place are rendered hazily ambiguous as the paths between nations wind off into the distance—no hard line in sight.  In a similar sense, the work of Taravat Talepasand capitalizes on the image systems that indoctrinate Iranian identity, state power and gender, and how these notions are portrayed within and augmented through a steady stream of American popular culture.  Through their respective exhibitions, Adam Feibelman’s Personal Provenance and Taravat Talepasand’s Born in Iran, Made in America, the artists explore the critical boundaries and borders that separate places and people—questioning, transgressing and meditating on both the systems of separation as well as a seemingly growing need for intensifying said divisions.

More Info: Guerrero Gallery