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    Erik Burke Shows Us His ‘Top 20’ in Reno, Nevada

    Is there any better combination than art and music? Yes there is…Art, music, AND a cold adult beverage!We’re impressed with Erik Burke’s new piece which he’s been calling “Top 20” in collaboration with Reno Nevada’s Record Street Brewing Co.The idea began with Record Street Brewery‘s Jesse Corletto bringing some pre-selected albums to Reno’s own Erik Burke aka OU. From there the project came to life on a wall outside the brewery/pizza restaurant/live music venue.The painted spines are shown a little worn and tattered, as real vinyl lovers know the music is to be played and not just appreciated as decor. Some great musical choices went into this piece, with classics from so many genres honored in paint. We appreciate the nod to The Velvet Underground & Nico’s classic LP with album artwork and production by iconic Andy Warhol.Erik lives in Reno, NV and creates place-specific murals throughout the world. His latest work can be seen in Bosnia and Herzegovina, S. Korea, Italy, and closer to home in Reno. His work has been published in the book ‘Street Art; The Best Urban Art from Around the World’, ‘Outdoor Gallery’, The Huffington Post, & The NYTimes.The artist’s previous works have included making a 40 acre ground drawing in the USA, creating a body of work while bicycling from Portugal to the exhibition gallery in Copenhagen, Denmark , becoming the de facto resident Artist of Lassen County Jail while serving time for graffiti, and seeking out decommissioned spaces for wheat pastes. Throughout that time he have continually returned to the inspiration of geography and identifying a sense of place.Keep up with the talented Erik Burke via his website & InstagramWritten by @jreich More

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    “STUCK UP” by Nuart Aberdeen Summer 2021 in Aberdeen, UK

    Nuart Aberdeen have called on the people of Aberdeen to be part of a record breaking new street art project. ‘Stuck Up’ is a worldwide collaboration which will take place in the city centre this July.Location photoNuart Aberdeen will be pasting up between July 1st and August 1st In a unique effort to put this art form firmly under the public spotlight. The project have over 1500ft of walls space so that means not only works curated by Nuart founder Martyn Reed in collaboration with fly-post legends UNCLE, a revolutionary wall of street posters by London’s Flyingleaps who are celebrating their fifth anniversary, but your art too.Submissions are now open, send it, and as long as it isn’t massively offensive.Ship your posters, poems, print outs, photos and collages to :“STUCK UP”THE ANATOMY ROOMSMARISCHAL COLLEGESHOE LANE, ABERDEENAB10 1AN, UK“As corona shut down large-scale arts venues across the globe, so festivals and large-scale mural productions met the same fate. At the same time, we witnessed a huge upsurge of creativity outside of those institutions: DJs streaming sets; opera singers delivering arias from their balconies. Within Street Art, we saw a renewed interest in smaller, more human-scale projects.In many ways, Paste-Ups and Locative Collages, disciplines that demand little more than a tabletop, scissors, magazines and /or paper, are as much related to “craft” as to the rarified world of contemporary art. But perhaps this is what the world needs right now: a less ‘stuck-up’ and judgmental look at the collective capacity of our communities to engage in shaping public space. A return to a more honest involvement in art as it’s created within cities.” Martyn Reed, Nuart Director and FounderLocation PhotoLocation PhotoA Paste-Up is simply an artwork on paper, pasted to a wall with wheat- paste, a form of self-made glue that – in America at least – became the name of the actual practice.Paste Ups are more often than not regarded as an artworks in their own right, usually created in the studio before being transplanted on the streets. The practice crosses over into notions of the more familiar fly-posting when art becomes the vessel for political sentiments and social calls to action. Locative Collages are a relatively new iteration of this idea, wherein small collages are created and then pasted, or “located”, in public spaces.Partners in this project :Aberdeen Inspired | @abdnispiredAnatomy Rooms | @anatomyroomsflyingleaps | @flyingleaps2016UNCLE | @unlcle_insta More

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    Olympic Organizers in Tokyo Will Put Together a Splashy Art and Culture Initiative to Accompany the Summer Games

    The Olympic Foundation for Culture and Heritage (OFCH) has unveiled plans for the inaugural Olympic Agora, an exhibition and series of art installations that celebrate the ideals and spirit of the games.
    The project, on view in Tokyo from July 1 to August 15, is inspired by the public assembly spaces, or agoras, of Ancient Greece, according to a statement.
    Viewers will be able to see artworks throughout Tokyo’s historic Nihonbashi district, including installations by Japanese artists Rinko Kawauchi and Makoto Tojiki and exhibitions of works by six Olympian and Paralympian artists-in-residence. 
    Another highlight will be a life-size commission by French artist Xavier Veilhan, who represented France at the 2017 Venice Biennale, that depicts five people of various ages, genders, and nationalities gathered in sport spectatorship. 
    Titled The Audience, it will become a permanent installation after its unveiling on June 30.
    3D rendering of Xavier Veilhan’s The Audience commissioned for Olympic Agora at the upcoming Tokyo Olympic games.
    The project also includes a multimedia installation by Montreal-based studio Moment Factory, and an exhibition of treasures from the Olympic Museum’s permanent collection in Lausanne, Switzerland.
    Onsite installations will be complemented by a digital program, including virtual exhibitions and artist talks on the Olympic Agora website and the Olympic Museum’s social media channels.
    In keeping with public health restrictions, visitor levels to in-person events will be limited and strictly controlled, organizers said.
    The agora will serve as “a hub for the cultivation, exploration and promotion of the Olympic values,” said OFCH director Angelita Teo.
    “In this unprecedented moment, the Olympic Agora is a symbol of determination, overcoming challenges, and international cooperation; of the power of sport and art to carry us in times of crisis.”
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    ‘For Every Story, I Have a Photograph’: Legendary Ghanaian Photographer James Barnor on His London Retrospective

    Photographer James Barnor has just celebrated his 92 birthday, weeks after his retrospective, “James Barnor: Accra/London,” opened at the Serpentine Gallery in London.
    Throughout his six-decade career, Barnor ran his own photographic studio and retouching business, Ever Young, in Accra in the 1950s, and then worked as a photojournalist at Ghana’s first daily newspaper, the Graphic, before moving to London in 1959 (two years after the African nation won its independence) to train and work as a lead photographer for the South African fashion magazine Drum. His oeuvre now stands at tens of thousands of images.
    Working as a photographer in the 1950s and ’60s, Barnor documented life in the U.K., photographing members of the Windrush generation, his holiday hikes with friends, and various weddings and christenings.
    He took iconic cover shots for Drum and shot the famous portrait of BBC Africa Service journalist Mike Eghan, the BBC’s first Black presenter, whose iconic celebratory pose under Eros in Trafalgar Square was recreated for Barnor’s Italian Vogue cover with British model Adwoa Aboah for its April 2021 issue.
    Published as a gatefold, the two images sit side by side: Eghan against the lights of the advertisements, and Aboah in the same motif, descending the steps of Eros, arms outstretched, 54 years later.
    James Barnor, Mike Eghan at Piccadilly Circus, London (1967)
. Courtesy Autograph.
    Since 2007, when his work was exhibited at the Black Cultural Archives London, he has had 16 solo shows internationally. 
    “I wish I was just a bit younger for this,” he said wistfully as we sat in his home in suburban West London. “I’ve got so many stories. And for every story I could tell you, I have a photograph.”
    Barnor’s photographs from the 1950s show a buzzing Accra at the dawn of independence. Yet he lost his Accra photo studio when his landlord wanted the space back, and after a friend sent him a postcard suggesting he may want to live in London, he decided to make the jump. In 1959, he got the money together and went to the U.K. with the idea of learning about television, which was yet to be introduced in Ghana.
    “When you’re young and you get the opportunity, you use it,” he said. “I came for a new country and new experiences overseas.”
    Barnor’s big breaks included photographing the Ghanaian independence ceremony for The Telegraph and, about a decade after his return to Ghana from the U.K. in 1970, he opened Africa’s first colour processing lab in Accra. Photographs taken in Ghana include an image of Kwame Nkrumah, who would go on to become the first Ghanaian president after independence.
    James Barnor, Members of the Tunbridge Wells Overseas Club, relaxing after a hot summer Sunday walk, Kent
 (ca. 1968). Courtesy Galerie Clémentine de la Féronnière .
    Still, he looks back on his early days in Ghana as “small fry” and calls his opportunities “luck.” 
    “Better late than never,” the photographer joked about his Serpentine exhibition, adding that he’d love to present the works in Ghana. “From Hyde Park to Northern Ghana, now that would really be a thing,” he said.
    As my visit drew to its end, he was still talking about projects and ideas. He showed me a video of the screening of three short films about his work in Trafalgar Square celebrating the opening of the Serpentine show. 
    “All this is wonderful,” he said, watching himself standing just where he took his immortal shot of Eghan in 1967.
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    Monumental wall by MONKEYBIRD in Burgos, Spain

    French stencil duo MONKEYBIRD recently finished a monumental wall tribute to Burgos Cathedral for its 8th centenary. The mural  is a collaboration with StARTer Proyectos Culturales for the project -Mymesis, beings and places- in the context of the VIII centenary of Burgos Cathedral. This project aims to generate a visual dialogue with the public about Heritage and contemporary culture.Burgos Cathedral is declared a World Heritage site in 1984 is the result of the work of many creators and patrons who dreamed on building a unique and sacred place. One of the most remarkable aspects of this georges place is how it reflects a rich succession of artistic styles, spanning classic Gothic to Baroque, to generate an eclectic, yet deeply harmonious, building.Nowadays in the XXI century, Burgos Cathedral keeps reinventing itself and artists keeps observing it with admiration and respect generating new projects around it.StARTer Proyectos* invited the French duo Monkey Bird to create a personal approach to its rich transferring a whole universe of symbols from the interior to the exterior. Louis Boidron and Edouard Egea met in Bordeaux in 2009. They have a long career that has led them to paint in places such as United Arab Emirates, India, Mexico, Netherlands and Ireland, among others. With their monumental aesthetics full of mythological references and classical architectures also with their singular color code they acquire an unique identity in the international Urban Art scene.Through this wall, the artists wanted to pay tribute to the communities of artisans and builders, which with their thorough and exuberant works endowed Burgos Cathedral with wealth and beauty.“Our intention was to offer an effect of complex depth and monumentalism, combining some of the most spectacular references of the temple, such as the main altarpiece, with its many details, the Golden Staircase, or the circular oculus in the center of Santa María façade.As a symbol of good luck for the community, we have represented in the center the protector of the town, Guardian Angel. This image under the guise of a gray heron is shown as a symbol of light and rebirth, flanked by two other angels whose original models they are in the upper part of the temple. This Cathedral is also unique in Spain in terms of finishes created with sculptures of angels.The small birds around the oculus represented a typology of birds call “papamoscas cerrojillo”, which usually nest in the cavities of the stone making a connection with the name of the famous automata o´clock from the XVIII century presents in the building. More

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    VukovART Street Festival in Vukovar, Croatia

    The 5th VukovART, Street Art festival, held last 15th of May to 15th of June, brought  some of the top world’s street artists to Vukovar, including Boa Mistura from Spain, BustArt from Switzerland, Jana Brike from Latvia, Juandres Vera from Mexico, Mr Woodland from Germany, Victor Splash from Russia, Artez from Serbia, Kerim Mušanović from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Šumski from Croatia and Marion Ruthardt from Germany!Vukovar is a city in eastern Croatia. It contains Croatia’s largest river port, located at the confluence of the Vuka and the Danube. The name Vukovar means ‘town on the Vuka River‘ (Vuko from the Vuka River, and vár from the Hungarian word for ‘fortress’).“Kiss by the Danube” by BustArtTake a look below for more images from VukovART and check back with us shortly for more updates on the global street art scene.“Everything is on the surface” by Victor Splash“Inseparable” by Mr Woodland“Surprise Yourself” by Artez“Portals” by Šumski“Procession of life by a blue river” by Jana Brike“The Heart is the Commander (We, ourselves and us)” by Juandres Vera“OSTAJEMO / We Stay” by Boa Mistura“Strawberry Flavor” by Kerim Mušanović“Lipizzaner” by Marion Ruthardt More

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    “Eye Candy” by Jon Burgerman in Boston, Massachusetts

    Praise Shadows Art Gallery will be opening the first solo exhibition in Boston by the New York-based artist Jon Burgerman this coming July 8 to August 8, 2021. Along with this, the artist will be on site creating a mural for the gallery, on which they’ll install new canvases, works on paper, and more.Eye Candy embodies the world of Burgerman’s characters through works in various media from drawing, painting, to three-dimensional collectible items and books.Burgerman’s creations manifest themselves in amusement, often an effort to make him laugh or distract his thoughts from outside pressures. This became particularly heightened during the lockdown in 2020.“Art is my route of escape, not only from the world around me but the anxieties inside of me,” says the artist. “I wanted to create a joyful, colourful space for people to visit, that shares how I managed to cope with the lockdown by focusing my attention on play and creativity. Hopefully visitors will come away with some of that energy and feel creatively inspired themselves.”Jon Burgerman (b. 1979, Birmingham UK) has been a practicing artist for over 20 years. His instantly recognisable art has been exhibited all over the world from DIY exhibition spaces to museums to even the White House. His works are held in the permanent collections of institutions including the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. More

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    ‘My Whole Purpose Was to Break the Tradition’: Watch Pakistani Artist Shahzia Sikander Subvert the Ancient Practice of Miniature Painting

    The Pakistani artist Shahzia Sikander helped create a whole new genre of painting known as neo-miniature—all before she’d finished her art degree. The extremely time-consuming practice is based on Indian and Persian miniature painting, which are rooted in traditional manuscript and book illustration.
    For her BFA thesis at the National College of Arts in Lahore, Sikander made The Scroll (1989-90), which represented the aesthetic challenge of a scroll’s rigorous framework, and was more than five feet long and almost a foot high (decidedly not miniature).
    “My whole purpose of taking on miniature painting was to break the tradition, to experiment with it, to find new ways of making meaning, to question the relevance of it,” Sikander told Art21 in an exclusive interview from 2001.
    Since that first breakthrough in the medium, Sikander has received a MacArthur “Genius” award, and raised the profile of neo-miniature painting to an international level. A survey of the first 15 years of her work, titled “Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities,” is now on view at the Morgan Library and Museum.
    Production still from the “Art in the Twenty-First Century” Season 1 episode, “Spirituality,” 2001. © Art21, Inc. 2001.
    In the video, which originally aired as part of Art21’s Art in the Twenty-First Century series, the artist described her work as a continual process of investigating Western stereotypes of her Eastern heritage, power structures in both societies, and her personal identity.
    A recurring theme in her work is the juxtaposition of Hindu and Muslim imagery. In one work, she depicts a multi-limbed Hindu goddess with a traditional Muslim veil covering her face, combining the iconography in order to address the “entanglement of histories of India and Pakistan.”
    “These are very loaded issues to take on,” Sikander tells Art21, “because anything and everything associated with Islam is either terrorism or oppression for women.”
    Watch the video, which originally appeared as part of Art21’s Art in the Twenty-First Century series, below. “Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities” is on view at the Morgan Library & Museum through September 26, 2021.
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    This is an installment of “Art on Video,” a collaboration between Artnet News and Art21 that brings you clips of newsmaking artists. A new series of the nonprofit Art21’s flagship series Art in the Twenty-First Century is available now on PBS. Catch all episodes of other series like New York Close Up and Extended Play and learn about the organization’s educational programs at Art21.org
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