Thursday, October 31, 2013

Banksy’s “Better Out Than In” Hits Yankee Stadium




Banksy’s “Better Out Than In” Hits Yankee Stadium

17 hours ago  /  Arts  /  4272 Views
Banksy has taken his “Better Out Than In” project to Yankee Stadium in the Bronx for his latest piece. Titled “Bronx Zoo” his latest piece depicts a stenciled leopard with a unique graffiti-spot design lounging on a yellow painted line. The name of the piece could be a reference to the Yankees from the ’70s,  who were referred to as “the Bronx zoo” due to the turmoil within he organization, or it could allude to the area’s history as a cultural melting pot. Let us know what you think below.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

5 Must Read Keys to Success:




5 Must Read Keys to Success:

1. Preparation

“The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes.”
~Benjamin Disraeli

Success loves preparation.  If the perfect opportunity presented itself today, would you be ready?  It’s better to be ready and not have an opportunity, then to have an opportunity and not be ready.
To succeed, you must be ready when opportunity comes.  Spend your time preparing for success, when your opportunity comes, you’ll be glad you did.

2. Work
“Success is simply a matter of luck. Ask any failure.” ~Anonymous

All failures know that success is simply a matter of luck, they know it’s just a matter of being at the right place at the right time, they know with assurance that success is directly linked to good ole fashion chance.
However, those who have succeeded know that success is directly and proportionally linked to work.  Even an amazing strategy can’t guarantee success.  Zig Ziglar said, “The most practical, beautiful, workable philosophy in the world won’t work – if you won’t.”
You have to put in the time.  However, when you put in the time, it makes success all the more sweet.  When you come from “behind” and do the impossible, it makes success as sweet as a honeycomb. John H. Johnson said, “I believe the greater the handicap, the greater the triumph.”
3. Remember the Golden Rule
“Success is still the constant application of the Golden Rule.” ~Anonymous

Never forget the golden rule, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”  That’s the key to success.  Serve your clients as you would have them serve you.  Meet their needs as you would have them meet your needs.  Give them prices that you would want to pay, exceed their expectations in a way that you would want your expectations to be exceeded.
When you follow the golden rule, you open the door to success.

4. Confidence
“Confidence is the companion of success.” ~Anonymous
If you don’t believe in your abilities, don’t be surprised if no one else does either.  Your negative thoughts about yourself send a signal throughout the world that others pick up on and respond accordingly.  If you’re broadcasting the station “Depression 108.7” then others will treat you like you’re depressed.
But, when you believe in yourself and your potential, people pick up that signal, and they will treat you according to how they believe, you believe, you should be treated.  Did you get that?

5. Lead
“A most important key to successful leadership is your ability to direct and challenge the very best that is in those whom you lead.” ~Anonymous

To be successful you must be a great leader.  There’s probably nothing more difficult than being a great leader.  It’s easy to be selfish, it’s easy to only be concerned with your needs, your wants and your desires.  But to succeed you have to lead!  You have to do what’s best for the people; you must bring the best out of those in whom you lead.
When you really lead, you will succeed.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Men’s Fashion Flash: Jay-Z’s Heat Vs. Hawks Game BassQuiat Snap Cap


Beyonce always gets the shine, but Jay-Z can pull together a few pieces! He recently took in the Miami Heat vs. Atlanta Hawks game with Lady Bey in a black v-neck and khakis, accented by Air Jordan 1 “Brooklyn Zoo” sneakers and a $100 IamRonBass BassQuiat SnapCap:

Friday, October 25, 2013

Rihanna Covers 032c Magazine Issue 25 Winter 2013/2014






After work with River Island and MAC, Rihanna continues to flex her sartorial sensibilities, this time gracing the cover of 032c Magazine‘s Winter 2013/2014 issue. Wrapped in a draping Gucci overcoat, Rihanna sports a large cross, rings, and other jewelry in addition to a mullet – all styled by Mel Ottenberg. The Berlin-based magazine also tapped creative duo Inez & Vinoodh to shoot the piece. 032c Magazine’s 25th issue, entitled “Picasso,” also contains articles on Nike HTM, considers Picasso’s exploits in Germany around 1913, and of course, features an in-depth editorial on Rihanna. Pick it up online now.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

COVER: Ebony G. Patterson / The International Review of African American Art / Volume 24, Number 3A / 2013



Ebony G. Patterson, Untitled Species IV (Bazile Paw), 2011, mixed media on paper, 63 x 50 inches.
Image appears on IRAAA courtesy of the artist and Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago.
Triple Consciousness, Diasporic Art in American Context
Guest editor: Cinque Hicks

From IRAAA web site:

This year marks the 50th year since the death of WEB Du Bois whose application of the notion of "double consciousness" continues to inform discussions of African American identity. In 2013, the notion is arguably further complicated by virtue of living in a globally connected world in which national identities take on more complex hues. How might Du Bois's idea be updated and remixed for the 21st century to include artists whose work addresses the curious place of working or living in the US, but from elsewhere in the Diaspora? How is work addressing the thorny idea of "triple consciousness"?


Excerpt from ‘Ebony Patterson: Dancehall’s Body Politic’ by Jamillah James:

What differentiates Patterson’s practice from the vanguard is her direct engagement with class at the street level and her interest in self-presentation in the face of adversity within Jamaican culture. Born and raised in Kingston, she is very much engaged in the dancehall culture, not just out of sheer enjoyment, but as fodder for her own artistic practice. There is something seductively casual about Patterson’s work, which affords it an accessibility evading the works of artists such as those who worked in the 1980s and 1990s making art dealing with identity.


Features include:

Destination Venice: Curator Yacouba Konatée on Côte d’Ivoire’s Biennale Debut by Cinque Hicks

The Harmful Consequences of Postblack by Eddie Chambers

Akosua Adoma Owusu: Exploring “Threeness” by Erica Agyenow

Paul Anthony Smith: Identity Inside Out by Jody B. Cutter


Art reviews include:

Wangechi Mutu: A Fantastic Journey (Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, NC)

Kehinde Wiley: The World Stage: Israel (Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco, CA)

Loïs Mailou Jones: Works from Every Stage of the Pioneering Black Woman Artist’s Career(Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA)

David Hartt: Stray Light (Studio Museum in Harlem, NYC)

Kara Walker: Rise Up, Ye Mighty Race! (Art Institute of Chicago)


Issue also features a portfolio of works from María Magadelena Campos-Pons and an artist project by emerging photographer Rosine Kouamen, who meditates on the relationship between three discrete identities: African, American and African-American.


Order the current issue, back issues and subscriptions at the IRAAA online store:iraaa.museum.hamptonu.edu/store.


Sunday, October 20, 2013

Basquiat


"To whites every black holds a potential knife behind the back, and to every black the white is concealing a whip." -- René Ricard, "The Radiant Child," 1984
Do you remember the moment in your childhood when you woke up to the dangers and injustices of the adult world? In the life Jean-Michel Basquiat, an American artist of Haitian/Puerto-Rican descent, that moment -- in which he glimpsed the hidden knives and whips -- stretched from his troubled early teens until his death at the age of 27 in 1988. Money, fame and drugs never dimmed the visions of racial injustice and historical abuses of power that both haunted him and fueled his imagination. Jean's sustained adolescent rage became the engine of his bracingly original art.
2013-02-24-JeanMichel_Basquiat001.jpg
Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1988:Photograph by Dmitri Kasterine. Website: www.kasterine.com. Collection of the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.

To cope, and to assert his individualism, Basquiat developed an aesthetic parallel universe with its own impenetrable language of words, signs and symbols. In the words of Marc Mayer, the Director of the National Gallery of Canada, Basquiat "speaks articulately while dodging the full impact of clarity like a matador." An auto-didact whose work parodies and subverts education and history, Jean-Michel Basquiat was the greatest outsider artist of the 20th Century.
Since his death, the art market has increasingly anointed him as one of its greatest insiders. Thousands of artists, would-be-artists, and poseurs have tried to emulate his trenchant precocity, and the results have been predictably lame. Basquiat's prickly intelligence is hard to match, and the esoteric poesia of his finest works is impossible to imitate. 
 
2013-02-26-BASQU1983_cropped.jpg
Jean-Michel Basquiat. In Italian, 1983. Acrylic and oil paintstick on canvas with wooden supports and five smaller canvases painted with ink marker. Two panels: 88 1/2 x 80 inches overall (224.8 x 203.2 cm). © The Estate of Jean-­Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery. Photography by Robert McKeever.

At Gagosian Gallery on West 24th Street in New York, an exhibition of over fifty works includes Basquiat's "In Italian," a quasi-religious diptych which displays an inflamed, contrarian and ultimately indecipherable commentary. It is worth commenting that this vital painting is now 30 years old: three years older than Basquiat was when he died of a drug overdose.
The title of the work offers viewers a suggestion -- that the painting is "In Italian" -- but there are several languages required to "read" the image. Basquiat often included words in his paintings and "In Italian" does have a single Italian word -- "SANGUE" (blood) -- which has been crossed out and replaced by its Latin counterpart: "SANGRE." There are also phrases and words in English, a mangled Italian name -- is it Paulo? -- and one word each in Spanish (AGUA) and Dutch (HOEK). So, inquiring visitors to Gagosian Gallery might start by asking: "Why the reference to Italian?"
2013-02-23-In_Italian003.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013

Italy and Italians played a major role in Jean's short career. The Italian Neo-Expressionist painter Sandro Chia was an early advocate for Basquiat's work, and helped introduced Jean to a dealer who had recently moved from Rome to SoHo: Annina Nosei. Basquiat later became friendly with artists Francesco Clemente and Enzo Cucchi, and his first one-man show -- "Paintings by SAMO" -- was held at the Emilio Mazzoli Gallery in Modena in May of 1981. Basquiat, who did not keep track of how many works he gave to Mazzoli, later told friends that the dealer had gotten a "bulk deal" and had ripped him off. On his second trip to Italy some years later Basquiat was detained by Italian customs officials before his departure, as the much wiser artist was carrying roughly $100k in cash, a sum they couldn't believe a young black visitor had earned simply by selling paintings.
2013-02-23-In_Italian006.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013

The main character of "In Italian" -- a blue headed figure on the right panel -- seems to stand for some kind of Christ as he might have appeared in a Baroque painting. After all, the phrase "CROWN OF THORNS" is printed above his cranium, with "THORNS" crossed out. The words SANGRE (Spanish for blood) and CORPUS© (Latin for body) are among other words and markings that appear on the figure's body, seemingly added up by a yellow cross that might be a plus sign which turns them into some sort of equation. Christ-like figures with floating crowns of thorns and African features make notable appearances in other Basquiat works.
In the left panel, the carefully labeled "DIAGRAM OF THE HEART PUMPING BLOOD" might be a reference to the "Sacred Heart," a symbolic representation of Christ's love for humanity, and also an emblem for many Roman Catholic institutions. It should be mentioned that although Jean did attend a Catholic high school -- where religious images must have made an impression -- he used religious imagery in a free-wheeling and personal way, hybridizing and personalizing European and African forms and rites.
2013-02-23-In_Italian009.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013
2013-02-24-sacred.JPG
A Baroque image of the "Sacred Heart"
Those familiar with Basquiat's life story will also recognize that the heart diagram was likely recalled from Jean's early study of the book "Gray's Anatomy," which he read with morbid curiosity while recovering from being struck by a car when he was very young. And as it turns out, the "Christ" figure actually began as a portrait of Basquiat's friend and studio assistant Stephen Torton, who later recalled that Jean added the "CROWN OF THORNS" inscription after the two of them fought over a woman. One of the interesting aspects of "In Italian" is that it is, to some degree, a collaboration. Stephen Torton made its distinctive criss-crossed stretcher bars, and a graffiti artist known as "A1" made the group of small attached canvases that Basquiat biographer Eric Fretz says are like the small panels often found on the "predella" (platform) of an altarpiece.
2013-02-23-In_Italian011.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013
2013-02-24-maestaduccio001.jpg
The predella of Duccio's "Maesta" Altarpiece, (1308-11)
Added to this Voudou/Catholic mix of esoterica are two images of Washington quarters, both dated 1951. Is it possible that the year 1951 refers to the beginnings of the American Civil Rights movement? It was, after all, the year that the father of an 8-year-old African-American sued the Kansas State School Board so that his daughter could attend an all-white school. That may or may not be the case, but in the left panel of "In Italian" LIBERTY is suspiciously crossed out and "IN GOD WE TRUST" is reduced to a sarcastic scrawl. Also, George Washington's right eye stares directly at the viewer, giving gallery-goers the creepymirada fuerte(strong glance) found in many Picasso portraits. The quarter on the right panel has been succinctly de-valued with the text "TEN CENTS." A forever de-contextualized date range -- 1594-1752 -- floats above.
2013-02-23-In_Italian008.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013
2013-02-24-1951d_quarter_dollar_obv.jpg
A 1951 Washington Quarter
2013-02-23-In_Italian012.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013

Despite the rich multiplicity of themes suggested by the words, dates and images of "In Italian," any effort to bring order to them is ultimately be doomed to frustration. Basquiat was a cultural and aesthetic channel-surfer whose sources are astonishingly diverse and disparate. His texts and images multiply uncertainty, and only Jean might have been able to tell us why he included the word "TEETH" four times, or whether the manic, Pinnochio-nosed green head on the right panel is meant to represent the apostle PAULO (Paul).
2013-02-25-Paulo.jpg
A detail of Jean-Michel Basquiat's "In Italian." © The Estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat/ADAGP, Paris, ARS, New York 2013

Puzzling out Jean's meanings is an engaging game, but "In Italian" was never meant to be translated. Jean's best works manage to pull off a balancing act: they mix references, cultures and images with conviction, but elude coherence. Does "In Italian" have things to say about racism? Very likely, yes. Does it subvert religion, culture and language to make a personal moralistic statement? Probably. Can it be assigned a fixed message? No.
The best way to understand "In Italian" is to keep in mind what Basquiat once said about his art in general: "It's about 80 percent anger."
I'd say the other 20 percent is about mystery.
JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT
February 7 - April 6, 2013
Gagosian Gallery
555 West 24th Street
New York, NY 10011