Supply and Demand (Gallery Katz) (Difference between revisions)
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Revision as of 18:09, 23 August 2006
Shepard's Supply and Demand gallery show made an appearance at Gallery Katz, Boston in September of 2004.
Review article from the Boston Globe:
Boston Globe
Calendar Section, September 30 – October 6, 2004
By Cate McQuaid
Shepard Fairey has been flouting the laws of consumer culture since he was a whelp.
Back in his undergrad days at Rhode Island School of Design, he mocked celebrity
endorsements by printing a graphic of Andre the Giant's face on posters over the
word "Obey," and by plastering the streets with them. Fairey still takes his art to the
streets, but he also shows at galleries, in this case Gallery Katz, which has a pointed,
comical array of his silkscreen prints on exhibit. The commentary is biting. One
blares "More Militerry, less skools;" another portrays President Bush cradling a
missile in his arms like a baby. Celebrities Sid Vicious and Tupac Shakur pop up
as false gods alongside Castro and Mao. The aesthetic recalls early soviet propaganda
posters. Fairey makes lush prints; the small ones on wood and metal have an
industrial grit to them, while the large ones on paper have a rich, layered compositions.
It's not just protest, it's art.
Official Gallery Katz images of the installation:
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This page contains an image or images of drawings, paintings, photographs, prints, or other two-dimensional works of art, for which the copyright is presumably owned by either the artist who produced the image, the person who commissioned the work, or the heirs thereof. It is believed that the use of low-resolution images of works of art for critical commentary on the work in question, the artistic genre or technique of the work of art, or the school to which the artist belongs on the English-language website thegiant.org, hosted on servers in the United States, qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. |