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https://fineartglobe.com/artists/a-plastic-flower-blooms-in-brooklyn/




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PARTICIPATING  in   TIME BOMB: The 25th Annual Watermill Center Summer Benefit & Auction


JEGENS & TEVENS. HUMOR IN SOMBERE TIJDEN, POOR TRAITS   REVIEW  by Henri Wijenbergh / January 14, 2018

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

POOR  TRAITS  duo show with Gerben Mulder / FRANK TAAL GALLERY / ROTTERDAM


   

Brother From Another Mother  January 13, 2018 — April 16, 2018   group show at  Mark Peet Visser Gallery / KNOKKE

 


         Weserburg Museum of Modern Art, Bremen, Germany /  PROOF OF LIFE

                  Robert Wilson: The World is his Studio

                  October 4, 2017    By  Jan Garden Castro /excerpt

 

    photo © Maria Baranova

 

 

                                                                       — D. Creahan

 

 

 


 

WALKING THROUGH THE MUD  sculpture  now  is a part of  ROBERT WILSON Collection

PARTICIPATING  in  WATERMILL  AUCTION 

https://www.artsy.net/artwork/stephen-shanabrook-walking-through-the-mud

 

 


Supreme x COMME des GARÇONS SHIRT 2017 Spring/Summer Collection

 “Coming off the back of a Rap-A-Lot Records and Dr. Martens collaboration, Supreme has finally unveiled its latest COMME des GARÇONS SHIRT project for the 2017 spring/summer season. The collection takes inspiration from Stephen J Shanabrook and Veronika Georgieva’s set of ads for the COMME des GARÇONS SHIRT 2010 spring/summer campaign, where the artists borrowed from their own collection of work titled Paper Surgery. We are presented with a comprehensive lineup that consists of a lightweight polyurethane-coated fishtail parka, cotton gabardine suit, rayon shirt, hooded sweatshirt, tees, coin pouches, wallets and finally, a Nike Air Force 1 Low. The Nike sneaker comes as a surprise when previous collections with the Japanese label yielded collaborative Vans and Timberland products. However, the Air Force 1 Low offering retains the minimal aesthetic of the classic model but slathers it with a bold print along the sides, as well as the sole. Moreover, the sneaker will see a later release date in May rather than dropping alongside the apparel.

The collection will be available at Supreme’s New York, Los Angeles, London and Paris locations, as well as its online store for these regions on April 13. Supreme’s Japan stores will see a release on Ape fatta in collaborazione con la casa giapponese.

HYPEBEAST  PUBLICATION

10 Facts You Need to Know About Conceptual Artist Stephen J Shanabrook

The creative visionary has a way with chocolate and cotton candy. By Felson Sajonas · Sep 26, 2016

 
 
 
 

In the fashion community, conceptual artist Stephen J Shanabrook is widely praised for his work on Comme des Garçons SHIRT’s 2010 spring/summer campaign. For the ads, Mr. Shanabrook borrowed from his own  Paper Surgery collection to help convey the design house’s wildly imaginative identity. The series were done in collaboration with fellow artist Veronika Georgieva and featured crumpled photos of fashion models — the images are meant to reflect the public’s perception of beauty. Untouched, the spreads only show the glamorous exterior of fashion. However, strategically crumpled to distort and disfigure the models’ faces, the photos aim to represent the uglier side of the industry.

Stephen J Shanabrook Comme des Garçons and Supreme

Stephen J Shanabrook and Veronika Georgieva

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here, we present to you some interesting facts about his personal life, past works and influence on the art community.

1. Born in 1965, Shanabrook was the son of an obstetrician and the town coroner. He worked at a chocolate factory in a small town in Ohio during his childhood.

2. He is known for using non-traditional materials, especially chocolate. Other materials he has used include animal carcasses, plastic dolls and cotton candy machines to name a few.

3. His works are meant to juxtapose unassuming objects and items of desire with the emotional responses surrounding addiction, violence, sexuality and religion.

 

  • Stephen J Shanabrook Comme des Garçons and Supreme

    Chocolate Box: Morgue (2008)

 

Stephen J Shanabrook Comme des Garçons and Supreme

 On the road to heaven the highway to hell. (2008)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. For his earlier works with chocolate, Shanabrook would go to morgues in Russia and the United States and make molds from the fatal wounds of anonymous people — this included gunshot wounds, stitched skin, protruding eyeballs, etc. A dark chocolate sculpture titled On the road to heaven the highway to hell depicts the remnants of a suicide bomber with his entrails in full display.

 

Stephen J Shanabrook Comme des Garçons and Supreme

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Slapped in the face until your shit turns red.” (2009)

 

5. Another food-related work features a performance art piece entitled Slapped in the face until your shit turns red. Here, standing against a white wall, Shanabrook places a cotton candy machine modified with fans in front of his face that slaps him with the red and fluffy substance. According to the artist, “The cotton candy performance for me is a simple gesture to conjure up feelings of forcing ones beliefs on others… even beliefs that seem sweetly correct. This action is the interpretation of a mental torture for the unwilling recipient.”

 

Stephen J Shanabrook Comme des Garçons and Supreme

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pharmaceutical Landscape (2009)

 

6. In his Pharmaceutical Landscape series in 2009, Shanabrook melted prescription pill bottles and formed them into Easter bunnies. The works are a reflection of the artist’s own battle with addiction and a commentary on how prescription drugs, often meant to alleviate people’s health issues, become a bigger problem themselves.

 

Stephen J Shanabrook Comme des Garçons and Supreme

Reporters Without Borders 25th Anniversary Ads – Kim Jong-un and Muammar Gaddafi (2010)

 

7. Was commissioned in 2010, along with Veronika Georgieva by Saatchi & Saatchi to create the advertising campaign for Reporters Without Borders’ 25th anniversary. The ads featured Kim Jong-il, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Muammar Gaddafi in the style of the Paper Surgery series.

 8. Shanabrook has held solo exhibitions at the City Museum of Ljubljana, Orel Art in Paris, Charlotte Moser Gallery in Geneva, Daneyal Mahmood Gallery in New York, Musee d’art et d’histoire in Neuchatel, Switzerland, among others.

9. When asked what he was most inspired by in an interview, Shanabrook responded: “The Arte Povera artists’ methods and process in how an endless amount of material can be adapted into an artwork, had a big influence on me.” The Arte Povera by definition is an art movement that originated in Italy during the 1960s. It combines conceptual, minimalist and performance art in addition to utilizing ordinary materials to undermine the commodification of art.

10. Stephen j Shanabrook was one of the artists Kanye West introduced his readers to when the rapper still had his official website in a blog format. Other artists named in different posts included John Currin, Gabi Trinkaus and Marco Brambilla.

 


 

 

Unlocking the secrets of Tasmania 

By Mike Yardley  / April 14, 2017 

 
 
MONA in Hobart
 

Carved into the riverside escarpment, the Museum of Old and New Art, universally known as MONA, boasts one of the most provocative collections of art open to the public.  And it’s the biggest private museum in Australia.This edgy, eclectic phenomenon has been so widely embraced by locals and visitors alike, MONA has emerged as an Australian national treasure. 6 years old, MONA was the brain child of Tasmanian, David Walsh, an art collector and mathematician who made a fortune fine-tuning algorithms enabling him to beat bookies and casinos at their own game. And ever since he opened his museum, like the man, MONA has feasted on up-ending the conventional. It’s nicknamed “the subversive adult Disneyland.” Unlike a typical museum, with a cliché pillared-entrance, entering MONA is more like falling down a rabbit hole. From the foyer, a spiral staircase leads you 17 meters underground, into a cave-like space, flanked by a 240-million-year-old Triassic sandstone wall. Apparently David Walsh, wanted the exposed wall to provide a greeting as such to creationists, and a challenge to their beliefs. Like the art, the gallery space is equally engulfing. What follows are three levels of steel and stone studded with art and objects loosely themed around sex, evolution and death. It unmistakably strives to shock, offend, inform and entertain in equal measure.

 

Standing in the basement, I gazed in awe of the gigantic installation called “Bit.fall,” a rain-painting machine created by German artist Julius Popp. Spanning two stories, this multi-million dollar contraption comprises 128 computer-controlled nozzles, that release dripping cascades of water in the shape of trending phrases harvested daily from news websites. This pulsing waterfall of words, streamed from real-time Google searches, ranked as my favorite art piece. It’s clever, current and rather hypnotic, like a cascading ode to the unrelenting news cycle. I was lulled into a false sense of complacency.  As I walked on, mulling whether MONA’s reputation for shockability was overhyped, I was suddenly confronted by the chocolate sculpture of the remains of a Chechen suicide bomber. Seriously – chocolate. Stephen J Shanabrook’s cast of a disemboweled suicide bomber rendered in chocolate is unsettling, if not distasteful.  Not exactly the sort of Easter treat to add to the wish-list. The piece is called On the Road to Heaven The Highway to Hell. It’s located alongside a collection of mummies. One level up, a wall has been lined with 120 white porcelain moulds of female genitalia, while another wall boasts a gigantic image of a man engaged in a most unsavoury act with a canine. I really didn’t need to see that.And it’s not hard to see why some art snobs sniff at MONA’s obsession with smut. But the centre-piece of MONA that repulses and engrosses in equal doses is called Cloaca Professional by Belgain artist, Wim Delvoye. This room-sized machine of giant test tubes, pumps and glass receptacles parodies the digestive tract of humans in lurid detail. Nicknamed the poop machine, it is fed twice a day, and if you really want to, you can watch the full digestive process of food unfold over three hours. I didn’t stay for the final act, but apparently the bi-product from this giant version of the digestive tract is absolutely pungent.

 

 

 


 

 

FIVE QUESTIONS WITH… // VERONIKA GEORGIEVA  &  STEPHEN  j  SHANABROOK 

by Rimma Boshernitsan

 

Veronika Georgieva and Stephen j Shanabrook join us in our new series ‘Five Questions With…’, a short-form dialogue created to spark curiosity and connection in bite-size form. From colorful childhood memories of the former Soviet Union, to the new concept of “usefull uselessness,” Veronika and Stephen — collaborators and partners in practice — tell us about their backgrounds and inspiration around their work.

 

 

 

 

 

Tell us a little bit about your background(s) and where you grew up?

 

VG: I was born in and grew up in Moscow, Russia. I had a wonderful “pioneer” childhood, known all-too-well to the children of the former Soviet Union. I sharpened my skills dismantling Kalashnikov weapons in 30 seconds in school and during my later years, graduated from Moscow Architectural University—one of the most liberal colleges in the country.

Meanwhile, Stephen, the son of an obstetrician and the town coroner, spent his childhood working at a chocolate factory and building robots in the basement of his house in rural Ohio. He received a BFA from Syracuse University and studied in Florence, Italy. He has participated in residencies at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and De Atelier in The Netherlands.

 

What turns you on creatively, spiritually, and/or emotionally?

 

SJS: I walk. I like to walk a lot, and from moving and seeing, I get inspired.

VG: I love the sea and forest and hiking, but it never inspires me. My mind is fully at rest when I’m in nature. However, what does inspire me, is any form of communication / connection with people, personally or through their art: books, sculptures, paintings, movies.

 

What was the impetus for you to start your artistic practice and how did you decide to do it together?

 

SJS: I wanted to contribute and communicate, but in a way that was “useless”—a sort of useful uselessness. I don’t try to make sense of what I do, organize it, or give meaning to it. It’s like my diary, but in a sculptural way. I call it “emotional conceptualism.” And with Veronika, as life partners, over time, it became apparent that our mutual attraction to the combination of destruction and beauty was something we share on many levels.

 

Who are you most inspired by (together and individually)?

 

SJS: The Arte Povera artists’ methods and process in how an endless amount of material can be adapted into an artwork, had a big influence on me.

VG:  I am inspired by people who have a strong sense of “being alive.” Those who constantly work on “being alive” like Henry Miller, Bukowski, Tolstoy, Brodsky, and Anna Akhmatova. Not necessarily optimistically alive, but who are sincerely trying to get to the core of themselves, to the core of who they and we are—turning the sufferings into the tool for search. Rilke, Rothko, Proust…

I refuse to be part of modern day’s strong competition in search of success, where artists are demanding to be understood and are willing to kill you with their bigger-than-life description of concepts and explanations. The more it’s unclear to you, the more you are trying to explain your ideas to others. The truth is simple, that’s maybe why we call it artWORK—one’s artwork either works or it doesn’t. By itself. Without you. Get to the core of yourself, work on yourself. The others will follow. Or not. Why does it matter so much anyway?

 

How would you want to be remembered?

 

SJS: As I am.

VG: As a piece of cake. A Russian one, not the horrible American sponge one.

 


 

15 Artists We Discovered Thanks to Kanye West’s Old Blog

 

 

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