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    Top 15 Children-Themed Murals

    Walk through a world of creativity and imagination as we present to you various murals that revolves around the concept of childhood by celebrated artists. Childhood has been used in street art to evoke a wide array of themes, be it playful or political messages.

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    Scroll down below and explore the innocence and wonder of childhood through these amusing murals.

    Roamcouch in Gifu, Japan (2018)

    BumbleBee in Seattle, USA (2015)

    Ever in La Boca, Buenos Aires (2017)

    Rustam QBic in Shanghai, China (2017)

    Mono Gonzalez and Seth in Kiev, Ukraine (2017)

    Kevin Ledo and Paola Delfin in Miami, USA (2018)

    Case Ma’Claim in Berlin, Germany (2018)

    Ernest Zacharevic in Dubai, UAE (2016)

    Lonac in Florida, USA (2016)

    Joe Iurato x Rubin in New York, USA (2014)

    Pilpeled in Venice Beach, Los Angeles (2019)

    Fintan Magee in Brisbane, Australia (2014)

    Telmo Miel in Versailles, France (2019)

    Seth Globepainter in Paris, France (2015)

    Millo in Ukraine (2018) More

  • A Goldsmiths Grad Student Just Dumped 31 Tons of Carrots Into the School’s Courtyard for His MFA Exhibition

    There are approximately 240,000 carrots—and an unquantified number of potatoes—sitting outside of London’s Goldsmiths College. The massive pile of root vegetables, weighing in at 31 tons, is an art project, on view as part of the school’s annual MFA exhibition.
    The performance component of the site-specific work by Rafael Pérez Evans, titled Grounding (2020), took place on Tuesday, when a large red tractor-trailer dumped the carrots on the ground in an orange tidal wave that swept through the college courtyard.
    Evans, who grew up in a family of farmers in Spain, was inspired by a protest tactic popular among farmers, particularly in France, called dumping. To protest cratering produce prices, farmers will pile up carrots or potatoes in the street, the vegetables becoming a physical roadblock and serving as a highly visible reminder of farmers’ oft-ignored labor. It’s a practice that has intrigued the artist since childhood.
    “On one occasion when I was quite young I remember people being very angry and upset as the cost of lemons had been devalued to such an extreme that it was costing the farmers money to sell their stock,” Evans told Artnet News in an email. “This issue made many farmers dump, in protest, tons of lemons, creating a sort of sea of yellow. This I guess was the first moment in which I became aware of the power of how governmental devaluation and international trade affected farmers.”

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    Staging Grounding in London is Evans’s way of reminding viewers of where their food comes from, and to consider the relationship our cities have with rural farmers. The work’s title comes from the therapeutic technique of grounding, or reconnecting with the earth and its electrical energy.
    “In the city, we are not very connected to the processes of how the things we consume are produced, under which circumstances and conditions,” Evans explained. “Looking into peasant culture, ecology, farming, and the soil is a way to reorient my compass into finding other ways of relating which perhaps aren’t so detached from land, plants and foods.”
    Soon after the work’s installation, photos and videos began circulating on social media, to the extreme confusion of many. But Goldsmiths was quick to explain the art connection when Times of London journalist George Greenwood—who is now describing himself as an “accidental carrot correspondent”—took to Twitter to investigate the “carrot conundrum.”

    The artwork has drawn some criticism for contributing to global food loss, with a group of four Goldsmiths students launching an Instagram account, @goldsmithscarrots, to protest “this incredibly wasteful art piece.”
    “Lewisham is one of the poorest boroughs in London and this mass dumping of carrots at Goldsmiths is beyond insensitive,” the group wrote. “It’s a massive slap in the face.”
    Evans says he actually wants Grounding, which is accompanied by a sign warning that the carrots are “not for human consumption,” to highlight the existing waste in food production systems.

    Evans went to a bulk animal feed provider to purchase the vegetables, which have been rejected by UK supermarkets and judged to be “animal grade” carrots. When the exhibition ends next week, the carrots will be donated to farms to feed livestock, as originally intended.
    “How can carrots that look perfectly fit but not be fit for human consumption and supermarkets but okay for animals is part of the question in the work,” he explained. “The issues around waste are very important.”

    But the students behind @goldsmithscarrots aren’t taking Evans’s word for it. They have been busy collecting, peeling, and grating the carrot pile to make vegan carrot cake and carrot soup. The group, which estimated yesterday that it had only used .3 percent of the carrots so far, is holding daily bake sales next to the artwork and donating the proceeds—reportedly nearly £700 ($900) over the first two days—to local food banks.
    For his part, Evans is “very happy that more artists are responding and creating new artworks, and dialogues around the questions that the piece ignites.”
    The initial performance was livestreamed on Facebook and can be watched here. In-person visiting hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., except for the exhibition’s final day, which is open until 7 p.m.
    See more photos of Grounding below.
    Rafael Pérez Evans, Grounding (2020) at Goldsmiths College, London. Photo courtesy of the artist.

    Rafael Pérez Evans, Grounding (2020) at Goldsmiths College, London. Photo courtesy of the artist.

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    So many lush ones🥕🥕make carrot soup, carrot cake, carrot crisps, carrot juice, carrot chutney, carrot cookies, carrot stews etc. Make for and share with your friends, neighbours, crushes, pets, mice in your accommodation, cleaners and security on campus, all your community 🥕🥰sharing is caring (be covid safe and put measures in place)- @ratwrists
    A post shared by WE ARE NOT THE CARROT ARTIST (@goldsmithscarrots) on Sep 30, 2020 at 3:55pm PDT

    “MFA Exhibition” is on view at Goldsmiths College, Ben Pimlott Building, St. James’s, New Cross, London SE14 6NH, October 2–October 6, 2020.
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  • A Lush Contemporary Art Show Inside Modernist Designer Eliot Noyes’s Home Is the Stuff of Real-Estate Fantasies—See It Here

    “At The Noyes House:Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing”Through November 28, 2020
    What the galleries say: “‘At The Noyes House,’ presented by Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing, provides a unique opportunity to experience contemporary art and design in an iconic residential setting. Taking place within [architect and industrial designer] Eliot Noyes’s (1910–1977) modernist family home in New Canaan, Connecticut, the exhibition brings together just over 80 works from 34 international artists and designers, including Lucas Arruda, Lynda Benglis, Heidi Bucher, Sonia Gomes, Green River Project LLC, Mark Grotjahn, Kazunori Hamana, Sheila Hicks, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Antonio Obá, Gaetano Pesce, and Faye Toogood, among others…
    In 1958, Noyes commented that aesthetic objects can ‘best be enjoyed in a house designed to bring art and their daily lives into as close daily contact possible.’ He created just such a place, and that sense of contact is still alive and well: a modern story, with a fairytale ending.”
    Why it’s worth a look: Never before open to the public, this sleekly designed house is a work of art in and of itself—never mind the lush surroundings and eclectic art and design objects inside. Eliot Noyes, who designed the home for his family in 1955, followed the same playbook he employed in his industrial design work on the IBM Selectric typewriter and World’s Fair pavilion: using truthful materials and adhering to simple forms. The exhibition—which represents a rare collaboration among two top galleries and the design fair Object & Thing—offers delightful juxtapositions between sleek Modern architecture and contemporary artworks, many of which were created specifically for this show. If you like to fantasize about real estate, this one is for you.
    What it looks like:

    Alma Allen, Not Yet Titled (2020); Hugo França, Rings (2007). Courtesy of Mendes Wood DM, Blum & Poe, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo.

    Antonio Obá, Wade in the water II, (2020). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo

    Antonio Obá, Wade in the water II, (2020). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing.

    Patricia Leite, Entre Nuvens (2020). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo

    Mimi Lauter, Alla Marcia (2019); Jim McDowell, Spike (2015) and Your Chains Can’t Hold Me (2020). At right: Paulo Nazareth, Sem título, da série Objetos para tampar o Sol de seus olhos (2010). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo

    Sergio Camargo, RELIEF nº 285-Paris (1970). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo

    Tomoo Gokita, Looking for a Lover (2020); Daniel Valero / Mestiz, Patél chair, pair (2015/2019); Frances Palmer, group of vases (2020). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo

    Sonia Gomes, Untitled from Pendentes series (2018). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing. Photo: Michael Biondo

    Sonia Gomes, Untitled from Pendentes series (2018). Courtesy of Blum & Poe, Mendes Wood DM, and Object & Thing.

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    Mr. Brainwash Pop-Up! “We’re In This Together” @ Taglialatella Galleries Toronto 10/01/20 – 12/31/20

    Matt

    Matt
    Canadian born, Toronto & Brooklyn based photographer, Matthew A. Eller has built a name for himself through his street art photos and in-studio visit photo-shoots/interviews; Ron English, Buff Monster, Dain just to name a few.Not only an artist in his own right, he’s an intellectual property attorney. Representing an array of who’s who of Brooklyn street artists.www.facebook.com/ellerlawfirm instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elleresqphoto/ Twitter: @ellerlawfirm More

  • ‘It Propels One to Actually Go Out Into the World and Explore’: Watch Sculptor David Brooks Link Skateboarding to Art Making

    What does skateboarding have to do with contemporary art? For sculptor David Brooks, both hinge on pivotal moments that provide what he describes as “a reality check.”

    “Skateboarding for me was the most fulfilling when you would find a new situation in an urban context,” Brooks explains in an exclusive interview with Art21 as part of the “New York Close Up” series. “It propels one to want to actually go out in the world and explore.” Similarly, the artist’s large-scale installations also shift one’s perspective, and draw attention to the urban, built landscape, and the natural world.

    When Brooks moved to New York to attend the Cooper Union in the early 1990s, he explored his new surroundings on his skateboard. Though, as a kid, he had dreams of going pro, eventually Brooks turned to art and began a practice centers around investigating the relationship between humans and culture, and the built and natural environments they live in.
    In the video, Brooks recounts some of his major works, including Preserved Forest, an installation at MoMA PS1 in which the artist planted dozens of trees and then sprayed and poured concrete over them in an attempt to recreate the deforestation of the Amazon.
    “We’re so desensitized to imagery of violence, both in terms of a landscape, but also in terms of a culture” Brooks tells Art21, describing the project as a way to “tether reality right back to it, just like skating, there is no ideology behind hitting the pavement.” 

    Production still from the Art21 “New York Close Up” film, “David Brooks Hits the Pavement.” © Art21, Inc. 2017.

    Another project the artist mentions is Continuous Service Altered Daily (2016), where he disassembled a 1976 John Deere combine harvester, and arranged the hundreds of parts for display. Combines are used to cut corn, break down kernels off the cob, and clean the grain, Brooks explains in the video. Similarly, “the exhibition breaks apart this piece of machinery into thousands of pieces.” 
    Right now, at the Planting Fields Foundation in Oyster Bay, New York, an exhibition of works by David Brooks is presented alongside art by Mark Dion, who also investigates complex ecosystems. The show, titled “The Great Bird Blind Debate,” will see both artists present interpretations of bird blinds, used by birding enthusiasts to observe their subjects.

    Watch the video, which originally appeared as part of Art21’s series New York Close Up, below. The brand new 10th season of the show is available now at Art21.org. 
    “The Great Bird Blind Debate” is open now at Planting Fields Foundation in Oyster Bay, New York. 
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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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  • Damien Hirst Is Riding the Wave of ‘90s Nostalgia With an Homage to His Own Early Work at His London Gallery This Month

    With all the shameless self-branding, ostentatious installation, and market madness that have defined his late-career work, it’s easy to forget that Damien Hirst was once seen as a fresh, cutting-edge “Young British Artist.” 
    Next week, the YBA figurehead will attempt to remind us of this himself with a robust presentation of works from the first two decades of his output. And, in typical Hirst fashion, he’s doing it on his terms, hosting the exhibition at his own personal gallery. 
    Going on view at Newport Street Gallery in London is “End of a Century,”’ a show of 50-some artworks from the 1980s and ‘90s, many of which belong to his best-known series. It’s the artist’s first solo show at the exhibition space, which he founded in 2015 to show off his personal art collection.

    The show takes us back to a time when “Cool Britannia” was a buzzword, Oasis and the Spice Girls ruled the music charts, and a shark suspended in formaldehyde could still thrill and shock the public.
    “Showing my works from the 90s and before, so long ago!,” Hirst wrote on Instagram, accompanied by pictures of his 20-foot-tall sculpture of an anatomical model, Hymn (1999-05), being hosted into the gallery by crane. “Makes me feel old—last century?”
    Early spot paintings, sharks suspended in formaldehyde, and college-era collages from found materials will be among the greatest hits on display. So, too, will be rarely-seen works such as Prototype for Infinity (1998), an installation of thousands of painted pills from his “Pill Cabinets” series, and Waster (1997), a vitrine filled with medical waste. 
    Damien Hirst, Waster (1997). Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates. ©Damien Hirst and Science Ltd.

    With the exception of a few private loans, most of the artworks belong to Hirst himself, according to The Art Newspaper. Technically none of them will be on sale. 
    The show, set to October 7 through March 21, 2021, will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue. Entry to the exhibition is free but you have to book a timed ticket slot in advance. 
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  • The Frick’s Plans for the Breuer Building Promise to Spotlight Its Masterpieces ‘in a Completely Different Light’

    For at least the next two years, New York’s Frick Collection will trade its Gilded Age mansion home for the Brutalist digs of the former Whitney Museum of American Art, designed by architect Marcel Breuer in 1966. Now, the museum has announced its plans for the long-awaited change of venue.
    The move promises a dramatic new setting for the Frick’s collection of Old Masters during the planned construction on an extensive renovation and expansion of the 1914 Henry Clay Frick House. The Frick Madison, as the temporary location in the former Whitney space has been dubbed, is set to open in early 2021 and will remain in operation until the project is done.
    The museum isn’t going far distance-wise—the Breuer Building on Madison Avenue at East 75th Street is only an eight minute walk from the historic East 70th Street mansion—but the two buildings are miles apart stylistically.
    “Audiences will be able to experience the collection reframed in an exciting new way,” said Frick director Ian Wardropper in a statement. “The minimalism of Marcel Breuer’s mid-century architecture will provide a unique backdrop for our Old Masters, and the result will be a not-to-be-missed experience, one that our public is sure to find engaging and thought-provoking.”
    The Met Breuer. Photo: DON EMMERT/AFP/Getty Images.

    This will be the first time that the Frick’s collection has left the confines of the mansion en masse, giving the curators license to change things up a bit and showcase the artworks outside of ornate period rooms.
    The Frick Madison display will be organized chronologically, by region, with rooms dedicated to Northern European, Italian, Spanish, British, and French art. Rembrandt van Rijn, Johannes Vermeer, and Anthony van Dyck will each have dedicated galleries.
    “Through fresh juxtapositions we will present our masterpieces in a completely different light, revealing unexpected relationships between subjects, artists, and media,” said Xavier F. Salomon, the museum’s deputy director and chief curator, in a statement.
    Diego Velázquez, King Philip IV of Spain (1644). Courtesy of the Frick Collection.

    “For example,” he added, “the Frick’s small but significant group of Spanish paintings, by artists from El Greco to Goya, will be shown together for the first time. The opportunity to deconstruct and re-present our collection in this way offers an invaluable learning experience that will enrich our understanding and enjoyment of the collection.”
    The expanded space also provides the opportunity to showcase collection masterpieces normally in storage, like “Progress of Love,” a series of Jean-Honoré Fragonard paintings that the Frick has never been able to show together in its entirety. And sixteenth-century Mughal carpets that would normally be installed as functional objects can instead be displayed on the museum walls, encouraging a fuller appreciation of their artistry.
    Jean-Honoré Fragonard, The Progress of Love: The Meeting (1771–73). Courtesy of the Frick Collection.

    Among the other heavy-hitting Old Masters visitors can expect to encounter at the new location are Thomas Gainsborough, Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, Titian, J.M.W. Turner, Diego Velázquez, and James Abbott McNeill Whistler, as well as works of the decorative arts ranging from Asian and European porcelain to Renaissance bronze figures to French enamels.
    The Frick’s $160 million renovation plans, which look to add nearly 90,000 square feet of exhibition space to the museum, have hit numerous roadblocks over the years. After preservationists fought to save the Russell Page-designed garden, Selldorf Architects went back to the drawing board, devising a plan that axed the museum’s circular music room instead. Over objections from music lovers, that design was ultimately approved.
    Rendering of The Frick Collection from 70th Street; courtesy of Selldorf Architects.

    After New York went into lockdown in March, the Frick opted not to reopen in its permanent home before beginning construction, which it hopes to complete by 2022 or 2023.
    The museum inherits the Breuer Building from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which moved in back in 2016, using the former Whitney Museum as an outpost for contemporary art. With rent priced at $17 million a year, the Met Breuer was widely viewed as an unsuccessful financial venture for the institution. In 2018, the Met announced that it would cut its eight-year lease short by three years and turn over the property to the soon-to-be-homeless Frick.
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  • The Biggest Exhibition of First Lady Portraits Ever Assembled Is Coming to the National Portrait Gallery in DC

    Women will take center stage at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC, this fall, with the largest showing of first lady portraiture ever held outside the White House. The show will span nearly 250 years, spotlighting the likes of Dolley Madison, Mary Todd Lincoln, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Jacqueline Kennedy.
    The exhibition, titled “Every Eye Is Upon Me: First Ladies of the United States,” will feature the 53 women who have held the post both formally and informally. In addition to the wives of 45 US presidents, other women who have been pressed into duty as White House hostesses, such as female relatives of the commander in chief. Thomas Jefferson, for instance, was a widow when he was elected, and thus relied on his daughter Martha Jefferson Randolph to fulfill the first lady’s duties.
    News of the exhibition, which will revisit the challenges each first lady faced, as well as their individual personalities and accomplishments, comes just days before the October 4 premiere of the CNN documentary series First Ladies, profiling Roosevelt, Kennedy, Lady Bird Johnson, Nancy Reagan, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and Michelle Obama.
    The Portrait Gallery show’s title is based on a quote from a letter Julia Gardiner Tyler wrote to her mother in 1844. Then only 24 years of age, she had just married President John Tyler (whose first wife, Letitia Christian, had died while he was in office). “I very well know every eye is upon me, my dear mother, and I will behave accordingly,” Tyler wrote.
    Eleanor Roosevelt in 1944. Photo courtesy of the Estate of Yousuf Karsh.

    “These remarkable women by and large set aside self-interest to devote themselves to the responsibilities of being ‘First Lady,’ a complicated, non-electable role that continues to adapt with each beholder,” said exhibition curator Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw, the National Portrait Gallery’s senior historian and director of history, research, and scholarly programs, in a statement.
    “The portraits included in this exhibition visualize the difference between these women, revealing fascinating details about the worlds in which they moved and the historical moments in which they lived,” she added.
    Eliphalet Frazer Andrews, Martha Washington (1878). Courtesy of the White House Collection/White House Historical Association.

    The museum is supplementing its own holdings with works on loan from places such as the National First Ladies’ Library, the State Department, and the White House, which boasts the largest collection of first lady portraits. The public has had limited access to those works since tours of the White House were restricted following the 9/11 attacks, making this exhibition a rare opportunity experience them in person.
    There will be some 60 first lady portraits on view, with paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, and photographs, including a video installation of images by Annie Leibovitz. In addition, the show will feature ephemera and artifacts, such as the geometric-patterned gown by American designer Milly that Obama wore in her official portrait by Amy Sherald.
    Milly’s sketch for the gown Michelle Obama wore in her official portrait painted by artist Amy Sherald for the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC. Courtesy of Milly.

    That painting, which was so popular with visitors that the portrait gallery had to move it to a bigger room, is scheduled to go on tour to five museums across the US starting in June 2021.
    “Every Eye Is Upon Me” is part of the Smithsonian’s $2 million American Women’s History Initiative, “Because of Her Story,” established in 2018 in response to growing calls for the institute to recognize and celebrate women’s roles in US history. It is also one of 11 exhibitions dedicated to women that the Portrait Gallery is staging between 2018 and 2022.
    Anders Leonard Zorn, Frances Folsom Cleveland (1899). Courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; gift of Frances Payne.

    A dedicated museum for women’s history could also be on the horizon for the Smithsonian, with the US House of Representatives voting in February to establish just such an institution on the National Mall in the nation’s capital. Similar bills have been considered since 1998, and companion legislation is still working its way through the Senate.
    “Every Eye Is Upon Me: First Ladies of the United States” will be on view at the National Portrait Gallery, 8th and G Streets NW, Washington, DC, November 13, 2020–May 23, 2021.
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