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© » KADIST

Raymond Pettibon

The five drawings included in the 101 Collection are representative of Pettibon’s characteristic cartoonish style. The images in them allude to his ever-recurring topics, such as the superhero (present both in Untitled Superman and No title without the comics ), a book cover (his literary sources), or a mushroom cloud. However, it is worth noting that this formal quality of his work is not exhausted in the simple illustration.

Invertebrate Interactions
© » KADIST

Sofia Crespo

NFT (NFT)

This short looped-video NFT Invertebrate Interactions by Sofia Crespo aims to capture generated impressions of diatoms. Diatoms are the microscopic algae that inhabit a large portion of our seas, whose anatomies are characteristically enclosed in a shell of silica, their shapes formed as various symmetries. The rapid, shifting quality of Crespo’s work reflects the pace of microscopic life, which often appears sped up to our eyes.

Letter to a Turtledove
© » KADIST

Dana Kavelina

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Letter to a Turtledove by Dana Kavelina is a short film based on a poem written by the artist. Delivered as a monologue and presented with subtitles, the poem encapsulates the traumas, grievances, horrors, dreams, and hallucinations that have descended upon Ukraine’s Donbass region since its invasion by Russia in 2014. Appropriating amateur footage shot during the war in the Donbass region, Kavelina’s film weaves sound and image into a poignant tapestry that considers the absurdity of war.

Janus
© » KADIST

Miljohn Ruperto

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Miljohn Ruperto’s high-definition video Janus takes its name from the two-faced Roman god of duality and transitions, of beginnings and endings, gates and doorways. He is usually depicted with two faces as he looks both forward and backward, to the future and the past. The video, which is deftly animated in collaboration with Aimée de Jongh, presents a close-up of a dying “duck-rabbit,” a vivified version of an ambiguous illustration made popular by the Austrian-British philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein in his Philosophical Investigations .

Trópico entrópico
© » KADIST

Felipe Arturo

Installation (Installation)

Defined as entropy, the second law of thermodynamics proposes that energy is more easily dispersed than it is concentrated. One basic illustration of entropy is to imagine white and black sand: once mixed together, it is highly unlikely that the contrasting grains of sand can be separated and restored to their original distinct color groups. Arturo’s Trópico Entrópico ( Entropic Tropics , 2012) considers the colonization of the American continent as a similarly irreversible process of cultural entropy.

Pivot III
© » KADIST

Sable Elyse Smith

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Sable Elyse Smith’s Pivot III resembles playground equipment uselessly reconfigured. The stainless-steel asterisks, assembled from prison visitation-room seating, are painted 2K black and blue: colors evoking the US criminal justice system, its racist enforcement, and the heavy-duty finish of finance capitalism with which the culture industry is enmeshed. The work consists of six long rods, affixed via plate to each of the faces of a central cube, from which they radiate in perfect symmetry.

Rabbithole
© » KADIST

Chitra Ganesh

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Rabbithole by Chitra Ganesh is a digital animation that refigures a fundamental plot device in myths and fables. Referencing iconic folklore such as Alice in Wonderland, the Odyssey, and the Mahabharata, Ganesh’s video illustrates the story of a hero’s journey and transformation that is not driven by the glory of violent conquest or saving a damsel in distress. Ganesh’s short video features a colorful style of illustration specific to the artist’s comic works.

Timur Merah Project II; The Harbor of Restless Spirit
© » KADIST

Citra Sasmita

Painting (Painting)

The work Timur Merah Project 2, the harbour of restless spirit is stretched out on a full cow’s hide, replicates the Kamasan Balinese painterly language that Citra Sasmita has developed in her recent works. It represents female figures, flames, and various natural elements, permutating whimsically in a narrative of pansexual energy. While rooted in mythological thinking, with specifically Hindu and Balinese references, the scenes are equally part of a contemporary process of imagining a secular and empowered mythology for a post-patriarchal future.

Shameless Venus, A 20-year-old female human has ingested a mole’s brain
© » KADIST

Marguerite Humeau

Sculpture (Sculpture)

This work forms part of a project that draws upon research into the use of psychoactive substances present in animal brains during the Paleolithic period. Bolstered by research by archaeologist Bethe Hagens, the artist explores the hypothesis that prehistoric shamans consumed the psychoactive parts of animal brains in order to achieve spiritual ecstasy and that the found figurines, reproduced by Marguerite Humeau, are an archival remnant of these experiences. The so-called “Venus figurines” take the form of ambiguous female forms and despite their exaggerated gendered traits, the onus is instead upon the resemblance to the ingested animal brains that led to their production.

Les Chenilles
© » KADIST

Michelle and Noel Keserwany

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Les Chenilles by Michelle and Noël Keserwany is a sensual film that translates the source of women’s oppression into the means for their liberation. In this narrative film, protagonists Asma and Sarah meet while working as waitresses in France. They both come from the Levant and, each in their own way, carry burdens of the past and the consequences of colonialism.

Cumulonimbus capillatus incus
© » KADIST

Evariste Richer

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Cumulocumulonimbus capillatus incus functions on the mode of a mise en abîme: it is a cube composed with 8000 dice. The work plays with chance, each installation produces a renewed visual combination. Robert Filliou said that Eins.

30 Proposals of Flag
© » KADIST

Jao Chia-En

Installation (Installation)

30 Proposals of Flag explores the relationships between signs, meanings, aesthetics, and nations. The artwork consists of 30 flags layered together and hanging from the ceiling. Each flag is illustrated with Jao’s rendition of a possible coat of arms derived from Taiwan’s economic and political history.

Untitled
© » KADIST

John McCracken

Painting (Painting)

Though not strictly representational, some objects in Untitled (1962) are recognizable: a flower, an egg, a foot. The arrows and directional lines suggest movement, but the forms they point to intertwine, prohibiting a straightforward reading. The shapes are as illustrative as a Rorschach inkblot; in their confounding, simple indeterminacy, they depict nothing and everything at once.

Reflection Paper No.2
© » KADIST

Wang Taocheng

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Reflection Paper No. 2 is one of four videos in which Wang attempts to accurately illustrate the writings of influential Chinese Eileen Chang, who published her works during the Japanese occupation of China. Image and text reflect on the everyday experiences of women in society, family, marriage, love, and death.

Zombie, Examined
© » KADIST

George Pfau

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

This work exemplifies George Pfau’s interest in zombies and liminal embodiment. In different ways, zombies are present here as an icon of coming apart, yet they retain a persistent thereness. In Zombie Examined, the frayed edges of the body are undone by a clinical look, rather than a visual effect.

Open Mind
© » KADIST

Yoan Capote

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Open Mind is a model created by Capote for a traversable public maze that, when seen from above, resembles the human brain. Because individual movement through the maze echoes the movement of neurons and a larger aggregated whole, visitors can be seen to enact a model of sociality and public space that both embodies and metaphorizes social consciousness. Capote’s model shows not just the proposed structure, but features figurines as well, to illustrate the possible scale and interactivity of the final piece.

I Want to be Gentleman
© » KADIST

Lu Chunsheng

Photography (Photography)

Lu has developed an oeuvre that consists of characters in bizarre situations. The large-scale photograph I Want to Be a Gentleman depicts nine men standing like statues on display in a museum on tall plinths in front of a run-down industrial building. Lu’s brooding films and photographs are preoccupied with China’s industrial era and communist history.

Decomposing Eternally
© » KADIST

George Pfau

Sculpture (Sculpture)

This work exemplifies George Pfau’s interest in zombies and liminal embodiment. In different ways, zombies are present here as an icon of coming apart, yet they retain a persistent thereness.

Framing Cannibal (Standing)
© » KADIST

George Pfau

Sculpture (Sculpture)

This work exemplifies George Pfau’s interest in zombies and liminal embodiment. In different ways, zombies are present here as an icon of coming apart, yet they retain a persistent thereness.

Zombie Swallows the World, Swallowed by the World
© » KADIST

George Pfau

Film & Video (Film & Video)

This work exemplifies George Pfau’s interest in zombies and liminal embodiment. In different ways, zombies are present here as an icon of coming apart, yet they retain a persistent thereness. In Zombie Swallows The World, the image of the figure is almost overcome by strong light that visually blows away the edges of the body.

History of Chemistry I
© » KADIST

Lu Chunsheng

Film & Video (Film & Video)

A mesmerizing experience of a vaguely familiar yet remote world, History of Chemistry I follows a group of men as they wander from somewhere beyond the edge of the sea through a vast landscape to an abandoned steel factory. Using long shots and atypical settings, Lu Chunsheng enigmatically refers to a distant history while conveying the sense of dislocation wrought by successive stages of modernization. The combination of elaborate landscape shots from the suburbs of Shanghai and Lu’s signature style of spare and minimally crafted acting offers a surreal view of human behavior in spaces marked by the hulking remnants of China’s extraordinary development.

Temple Creek, a branch of Escalante River, Aquarius Plateau Utah n.d. (Stereoscopic view)
© » KADIST

Shaun O'Dell

The San Francisco–based artist Shaun O’Dell often uses natural settings as subject matter, lending an artistic complexity to the landscapes he depicts. Stereoscopic images are dual, slightly offset identical pictures that, when seen through a special viewing device, appear three-dimensional. In Temple Creek, a branch of Escalante River, Aquarius Plateau Utah n.d. (Stereoscopic view) (2011) O’Dell has chopped each of the two side-by-side images into 10 vertical strips and mixed them up, to construct a new image.

Purple Brush 8
© » KADIST

Shaun O'Dell

Painting (Painting)

Shaun O’Dell’s paintings, installations, videos, sculptures, and music explore the overlapping realities of human and natural structures. Whether abstract or figurative, they often read like hieroglyphics, in that they piece together a philosophical portrait of reality. Purple Brush 8 is a painting that details a meeting of geometric forms, and the optical play that results.

F n' F (Face and Fingers)
© » KADIST

Moe Satt

Photography (Photography)

These photographs document the hand and facial gestures in Moe Satt’s performance F n’ F (Face & Fingers) . Whistling and wearing minimal clothing within a bare gallery space, Moe Satt performed a choreographed sequence of gestures based upon those he observed on the streets of Yangon, Myanmar. Each photograph is simple, showing only the artist’s face and hands with a title and caption that describes the meaning of the documented gesture.

Untitled
© » KADIST

Lucia Madriz

Painting (Painting)

In her geometric paintings on wood panel, Madriz employs the Fibonacci numbers to illustrate, in simplified form, the pattern of natural plant growth—beginning from a single stem, and growing exponentially, rationally, and efficiently outward from there. Tinting the underlying wood but not covering it, Madriz’s delicate cubes seem to hover on the surface of the warm wood surfaces, drawing more attention to the grain and its own natural pattern. Always drawing the attention back to the natural world, Madriz’s multimedia works aim to reassert the natural, and our own links to it.

torii series
© » KADIST

Motoyuki Shitamichi

Photography (Photography)

Motoyuki Shitamichi launched his Torii project in 2006. He proceeded to visit and photograph torii that are situated outside Japan’s current national border. Expansionist Japan constructed numerous torii during its occupation of the Northern Mariana Islands (now a U. S. territory), Northeast China (former Manchuria), Taiwan, South Korea, and Sakhalin (the eastern most area of Russia).

Spaceship sketches of The Lemurian
© » KADIST

Yin-Ju Chen

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

This work includes sketches for Extrastellar Evaluations , the project she produced at Kadist. Extrastellar Evaluations introduces Plato’s mythical state of Atlantis as the theoretical birthplace of conceptual art. Well-known and obscure epistemological notions from the annals of cosmology and mysticism guided and informed her research in the Bay Area during the Kadist residency at the beginning of 2016.

El mar y sus múltiples afluentes
© » KADIST

Adriana Bustos

Painting (Painting)

El mar y sus múltiples afluentes (The Sea and its Multiple Tributaries) builds on the concept of trafficking that Adriana Bustos has been exploring over the last decade. The piece represents an apocryphal river and illustrates the routes of the slave trade between the coasts of Africa, Europe, and South America, departing from the Congo River (once called Zaira), and arriving at Río de la Plata, the main river in Buenos Aires that divides Argentina from Uruguay. The work collapses time and space, placing the coasts of colonial empires across the colonies where slaves were taken.

One Universe, One God, One Nation
© » KADIST

Yin-Ju Chen

Film & Video (Film & Video)

One Universe, One God, One Nation was inspired by Hannah Arendt’s analysis of space exploration and by the astrological horoscope of Chinese political and military leader Chiang Kai-shek (1887-1975). Chiang was born with the sun in Scorpio and at the Ninth House, moon in Aries, and ascendant in Capricorn, signifying an individual who is headstrong, intense, and persistent, with a desire for leadership. Yin-Ju juxtaposes images of outer space, war, and subservient masses, calling attention to how the dictator’s violence and charismatic power over the crowd was predicted by his particular astrology.

George Pfau

George Pfau’s work explores marginal and transitional states of being...

Yin-Ju Chen

Lu Chunsheng

Shaun O'Dell

Yoan Capote

Sable Elyse Smith

Sable Elyse Smith is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and educator based in New York and Richmond, Virginia...

Felipe Arturo

Jao Chia-En

Chia-En Jao’s artwork approaches issues of identity, political regimes, coded sign systems, and his own experiences as a migrant...

Phan Quang

Visual artist and photographer Phan Quang stages nuanced compositions that illustrate the relationship between global historical events and the personal histories of families and communities in Vietnam...

Angela Su

Angela Su’s practice is derived from her two divergent backgrounds–she received a degree in biochemistry in Canada before pursuing visual arts...

James "Yaya" Hough

Working in ballpoint pen, pencil, and watercolor, often on the backs of bureaucratic prison forms, James “Yaya” Hough’s work conveys the burdens of incarcerated life, revealing not only the brutal reach of the carceral system, but laying bare its affects...

John McCracken

Adriana Bustos

Adriana Bustos creates a narrative discourse through installation, video, photography and drawing, in which her reflections on prevailing social, political or religious oppression appear in non-linear interpretations of history...

Raymond Pettibon

Wang Taocheng

Wang Taocheng is a Shanghai artist who lives and works in Amsterdam...

Chitra Ganesh

Spanning printmaking, sculpture, and video, Chitra Ganesh’s work draws from broad-ranging material and historic reference points, including surrealism, expressionism, Hindu, Greek and Buddhist iconographies, South Asian pictorial traditions, 19th-century European portraiture and fairy tales, comic books, song lyrics, science fiction, Bollywood posters, news and media images...

Lucia Madriz

Born in Costa Rica and living in Germany, artist Lucía Madriz has a global perspective...

Fran Herndon

Fran Herndon was born in Oklahoma in 1929, then moved to San Francisco in 1957, where she came into contact with Jack Spicer, who encouraged her painting practice by motivating her to study at the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute)...

Citra Sasmita

Artist Citra Sasmita’s work is inscribed with originality in a pan-Asian effort to revisit traditional artistic languages as tools of expression in contemporary society...

Bady Dalloul

Bady Dalloul cunningly employs collage across various media: texts, drawings, video, and objects to produce powerful works commenting on the past and the present...

Michelle and Noel Keserwany

Michelle and Noël Keserwany compose and perform their own songs, as well as contribute to the illustrations and animations featured in the videos they produced...

Sofia Crespo

Since 2018, Sofia Crespo has been working on what she terms “artificial natural history”...

Moe Satt

Moe Satt is a Burmese visual and performance artist who uses his own body as a symbolic field for exploring self, identity, embodiment, and political resistance...

Dana Kavelina

Dana Kavelina is an artist and activist who works with video, animation, painting, illustration, and text...

Marcel Pardo Ariza

Marcel Pardo Ariza is a queer latinx visual artist and curator that explores the relationship between representation, kinship, and queerness through constructed photographs, color sets, and installations...

Omer Fast

Motoyuki Shitamichi

After graduating from Musashino Art University in 2001, Shitamichi traveled for four years throughout Japan and took photographs of war remains...

Evariste Richer

Evariste Richer constantly invents new standards for measurement which are mostly objects to prompt the spectator’s potential investigations: avalanche probes, a meter drawn from memory, a meter with no measurements… Meteorology, science, magic, mineralogy, photography, optics are his preferred terrains...

Miljohn Ruperto

Marguerite Humeau

Marguerite Humeau’s work begins with intensive research that calls upon the expertise of various specialists including historians, anthropologists, paleontologists, zoologists, linguists or conspiracy theorists...

© » MODERN MET ART

about 11 months ago (02/11/2024)

Artist Spent 3 Years Drawing Map of the World with 1,600 Animals Home / Drawing / Illustration Artist Spent Three Years Drawing Map of the World with 1,642 Animals By Margherita Cole on February 11, 2024 Do you know which species of animals are indigenous to your area? Artist Anton Thomas has created a pictorial map that is both educational and stunning to look at...

© » BOOOOOOOM

about 11 months ago (02/05/2024)

Illustrator Spotlight: Hoi Chan – BOOOOOOOM! – CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTS Submit A selection of recent work by Hong Kong-born illustrator Hoi Chan (previously featured here )...

© » LONDONIST

about 12 months ago (01/22/2024)

Quentin Blake: Now Exhibition | Londonist This Free Quentin Blake Exhibition Lands In London At The End Of January By Will Noble Will Noble This Free Quentin Blake Exhibition Lands In London At The End Of January The exhibition is free, although if you want, you can spend a lot of money by purchasing an original...

© » COLOSSAL

about 13 months ago (12/18/2023)

Taking three years from start to finish, Anton Thomas ’s meticulously detailed map takes us on a zoological journey around the globe...

© » ARTSJOURNAL

about 13 months ago (12/18/2023)

Is Watching a Movie the New Reading a Book? - WSJ Skip to Main Content Subscribe Sign In This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only...

© » ARTSJOURNAL

about 13 months ago (12/17/2023)

That $4 Thrift Shop Painting Finally Does Sell for Big Bucks - The New York Times Arts | That $4 Thrift Shop Painting Finally Does Sell for Big Bucks https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/16/arts/nc-wyeth-sale-thrift-shop.html Share full article Advertisement SKIP ADVERTISEMENT The saga of the $4 thrift shop painting has a happy ending after all...

© » ARTSY

about 13 months ago (12/15/2023)

Original watercolor from “The Little Prince” watercolor fetches over $380,000 at Christie’s...

© » ROYAL ACADEMY

about 13 months ago (12/12/2023)

A History of Performance Art | Blog | Royal Academy of Arts Pussy Riot’s protest performance Illustration by Lucinda Rogers A History of Performance Art Read more Become a Friend A History of Performance Art By Kelly Grovier Published 16 October 2023 With Marina Abramović taking over the Main Galleries at the RA, we look at some other artists who have shaped the history of performance art...

© » LITHUB

about 13 months ago (12/12/2023)

The 139 Best Book Covers of 2023 ‹ Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Fiction and Poetry News and Culture Lit Hub Radio Reading Lists Book Marks CrimeReads About Log In Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Literary Criticism Craft and Advice In Conversation On Translation Fiction and Poetry Short Story From the Novel Poem News and Culture The Virtual Book Channel Film and TV Music Art and Photography Food Travel Style Design Science Technology History Biography Memoir Bookstores and Libraries Freeman’s Sports The Hub Lit Hub Radio Behind the Mic Beyond the Page The Cosmic Library Emergence Magazine Fiction/Non/Fiction First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing Just the Right Book Keen On Literary Disco The Literary Life with Mitchell Kaplan The Maris Review New Books Network Open Form Otherppl with Brad Listi So Many Damn Books Thresholds Tor Presents: Voyage Into Genre Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast WMFA Reading Lists The Best of the Decade Book Marks Best Reviewed Books BookMarks Daily Giveaway CrimeReads True Crime The Daily Thrill CrimeReads Daily Giveaway Log In The 139 Best Book Covers of 2023 We Asked 46 Designers for Their Favorites By Emily Temple December 12, 2023 For what is now the eighth time in a row, I am pleased to present the best book covers of the year—as chosen by some of the industry’s best book cover designers...

© » ARTSJOURNAL

about 13 months ago (12/11/2023)

The American Scholar: Hey Siri, Call Webster - Kelly McMasters Tuning Up - Winter 2024 Hey Siri, Call Webster Subscription required When it comes to learning new words, it’s not where you look them up that’s important By Kelly McMasters | December 4, 2023 Illustration by Matt Rota Not long ago, my son asked me about the meaning of a word in a novel he was reading for his fifth-grade book club...

© » BOOOOOOOM

about 13 months ago (12/08/2023)

Where to Submit Your Work: A Curated List of Websites that Feature Art + Illustration – BOOOOOOOM! – CREATE * INSPIRE * COMMUNITY * ART * DESIGN * MUSIC * FILM * PHOTO * PROJECTS Submit So you’ve just completed your latest creative project or maybe you’ve been building up your portfolio for a while and finally feel ready to share, what next? It’s important to be confident and put yourself out there, but let’s first talk about what all this process entails in order to make the most of your time and energy....

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/08/2023)

Girls on top: wrestling smackdown draws the Art Week Miami crowds Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Art Basel in Miami Beach 2023 news Girls on top: wrestling smackdown draws the Art Week Miami crowds Sukeban, a group of Japanese women wrestlers, drew the crowds to a skatepark under an overpass at one of Art Week Miami’s more unusual events Gareth Harris 8 December 2023 Share Dressed to kill: Bingo, one of the competitors in the Sukeban Collective wrestling tournament on Wednesday night Deonté Lee/BFA.com It was a first for Art Week Miami: a Japanese women’s wrestling event held in a skatepark in the city’s downtown area...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 13 months ago (12/07/2023)

50 Years Ago, Barbara Nessim Broke Illustration’s Glass Ceiling Skip to content Barbara Nessim, “A Maze From Above” (1970), pen and ink and watercolor on paper, 14 x 10 1/4 inches (all images courtesy Derek Eller Gallery unless noted otherwise) Artist, illustrator, and designer Barbara Nessim is one of very few women who found full-time work in the American editorial and commercial arts sphere during the 1960s...

© » BOOOOOOOM

about 13 months ago (12/01/2023)

"A Walk After Snow" by Aritst Lucy (Jiachun) Hu Submit A poetic collection by London-based artist and illustrator Lucy (Jiachun) Hu ...

© » LONDONIST

about 14 months ago (11/24/2023)

Vintage London Palladium Programmes | Londonist In Pictures: Vintage London Palladium Programmes By Robert Opie Robert Opie In Pictures: Vintage London Palladium Programmes Robert Opie, collector and author of numerous works on British nostalgia and ephemera — and founder of London's Museum of Brands — has shared his collection of vintage programmes from the London Palladium with us...

© » KUMI CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE ART

about 14 months ago (11/01/2023)

Chiho Aoshima, a prominent Japanese artist, burst onto the international art stage in the early 2000s, showcasing a distinctive fusion of traditional Japanese artistic techniques and contemporary themes...

© » BOMB

about 16 months ago (09/25/2023)

BOMB Magazine | Words Have Power Necessary (Required) Cookies that the site cannot function properly without...

© » HUFFINGTON POST

about 21 months ago (04/13/2023)

These hand-drawn illustrations, vibrant digital prints and meaningful paintings are just waiting to be displayed in your home....

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 26 months ago (11/24/2022)

Echoes from the Stars: A Collective Map of Love, Memories and Regret | ArtsEquator Skip to content Jean Baptise Phou’s work My Mother’s Tongue began as a way for the artist to examine his relationship with his Teochew-speaking mother...

© » THE JEALOUS CURATOR

about 31 months ago (06/18/2022)

I needed a little art therapy, so I called the best doctor* in the business… Andy J...

© » THE JEALOUS CURATOR

about 31 months ago (06/04/2022)

Yep, that image pretty much sums it up! Large-scale, hyperreal paintings on custom-cut panel, and a pug named Mochi...

© » STEVE LAMBERT

about 37 months ago (12/23/2021)

You Won! - Steve Lambert You Won! - Steve Lambert Steve Lambert has a book coming out Art Works News Writing About Steve Contact Resume Now Newsletter Book Creative Commons BY-NC-SA December 2021 Work Art of Activism Book , Center for Artistic Activism , Prints , risograph 11×17 (approx) 2-color Risograph Print on French Paper Printed at Eureka House in Kingston, NY Illustration from The Art of Activism book Available as a thank you for 2021 donors to the Center for Artistic Activism Share this: Twitter Facebook Related Posts November 07, 2021 Art and Fear of Propaganda Work June 19, 2021 The Art of Activism – Pre-order the Book News October 04, 2020 Talk at frank Gathering Talks September 28, 2020 Living the City Exhibition – Berlin Exhibitions June 07, 2020 Conversation with Avram Finkelstein Talks May 10, 2020 Free the Vaccine for COVID-19 Work May 03, 2020 Teaching artistic activism through infomercials Studio Log January 22, 2020 Frank Gathering 2020 Talks August 25, 2019 508 at Seattle City Hall Work August 18, 2019 Delays Mean Deaths site Work July 27, 2019 Laser cut case for HC-SR04 Ultrasonic Sonar Sensor News November 21, 2018 Macedonia Art Action Academy 2018 Work November 05, 2018 Art as Social Action Work October 28, 2018 2018 C4AA Print: The Jedi Mind Trick For Sale October 25, 2018 C4AA at Yale Talks October 22, 2018 C4AA in Macedonia Work April 30, 2018 Cancel the Apocalypse at Re:Publica Talks December 27, 2017 C4AA Workshop in Guinea, West Africa News December 15, 2017 Imagine Winning For Sale November 21, 2017 I HEART SCS Print series Work April 25, 2017 3 Workshops in April/May Talks April 15, 2017 Fight Back Pack #2: Defend U...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 39 months ago (11/01/2021)

Shock Horror: The Southeast Asian monsters we love | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints Illustrations by Divyalakshmi and Natalie Christian Tan November 1, 2021 ArtsEquator chats with five writers about their favourite horror characters and monsters from Southeast Asian lore and mythology...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 44 months ago (05/28/2021)

Cakap-Cakap: Interview with Daryl Lim for Local Flavours | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles May 28, 2021 In this month’s Cakap-Cakap (chit-chat), ArtsEquator speaks with poet and critic, Daryl Lim Wei Jie, who curated the poems featured in Local Flavours , an interactive site based on the concept of food delivery mobile apps...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 53 months ago (09/11/2020)

Which Type of Online Arts Audience Are You? | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints HAFI September 11, 2020 We all miss being able to attend shows physically in theatres, but we’re also quick to adapt...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 60 months ago (01/22/2020)

The illustrations and personal work of artist Jay Torres have a dark surrealist edge...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 62 months ago (12/11/2019)

Micha Huigen’s illustrations dissect and reassemble everyday objects into surreal machines...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 62 months ago (12/04/2019)

British-Iranian artist Nikoo Bafti crafts vibrant scenes that represent Mother Nature, pulling inspiration from varying mythologies...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 62 months ago (11/22/2019)

Following the release of his Fantagraphics book with portraits of all 44 U...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 78 months ago (07/30/2018)

Weekly Picks: Indonesia (28 July - 5 August 2018) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Weekly To Do July 30, 2018 Top Picks of Indonesia art events in Batu, Yogyakarta, Bandung and Jakarta from 30 July – 5 August 2018...