Banksy Returns to the West Wall with a New Venture – Walled-Off Hotel

via walledoffhotel.com

Less than two years since the massively successful resort venture Dismaland in Weston-super-Mare, Bristol, the notorious street artist/performance master Banksy opened a hotel venture today in one of the most contentious and dangerous part of the world in Bethlehem, just steps away from the West Bank wall. There wasn’t even a rumbling of this project on the Internet before today, so I was very surprised to see this news come out this morning. Named Walled-Off Hotel (sounds a lot like Waldorf, no?), it is a 10-room hotel managed and staffed by locals of the city and full of new works created by Banksy.

Reservation opens on March 11th, and guests will be able to stay in the rooms beginning March 20th. It is complete with a classic piano bar where music greats like Elton John and Massive Attack will be playing remotely through an automated piano, a gallery where Palestine artwork will be showcased, and a museum depicting the history of the West Bank in classic Banksy style.

The rooms themselves range from $30 for a bunk in the Budget room to $300 Presidential suite where you can feel like a sociopathic despot. Every room is furnished with interior decoration by Banksy, which seems like a logistic nightmare with entrepreneurial fans who might try their hand at acquiring a new Banksy work. To curb those efforts, there is a $1000 deposit for guests, although that seems like pennies when Banksy’s works sell for hundreds of thousands at auction. In addition, there is a check-out inspection to ensure no work has been defaced or taken from the room. I guess that should discourage foul-play. This is probably one of the few hotels in the world where you actually want to look at the art in the room.

Presidential suite via walledoffhotel.com
Bunks in the Budget room via walledoffhotel.com

Walled-Off Hotel is a quiet protest against the on-going political  and military Israel-Palestine conflict that are affecting the ordinary citizens, but also a gift to these very citizens that are suffering because of it.  I’m not going to pretend that I know much of what’s going on out there, but it’s not hard to imagine that thousands of new tourists will be coming by Bethlehem to pay pilgrimage to the hotel, which means a big boon for the local economy. According to the FAQ, Banksy is planning on keeping the hotel open for the year, but probably will be open as long as there are guests. I just hope the short attention span of today’s culture doesn’t let this establishment be forgotten too quick, leaving the local workers of this hotel jobless. This isn’t Banksy’s first time in the West Bank though, so clearly Israel-Palestine conflict is an issue that he cares deeply about.

via walledoffhotel.com

The hotel piano bar, art gallery, and museum are open to non-guests, but you’ll have to be a paying guest if you want to visit a room. For those who cannot visit the hotel in person, it looks like a web shop called Wall-Mart (this sounds a lot like the retail giant Wal-Mart, no?) is going to open on March 20th. Based on what I’ve read, I’m not holding my breath for new Banksy prints, but I believe there will be at least Walled-Off Hotel themed paraphernalia.

via walledoffhotel.com

I never thought that we’d ever call Banksy a hotelier.

Here are a few links for more information on this new hotel.

Official website for the Walled-Off Hotel

‘Worst view in the world’: Banksy opens hotel overlooking Bethlehem wall

See inside Banksy’s new Walled Off Hotel in Bethlehem

Invader Levels Up with “Hello My Game Is” @ Le Musee en Herbe

The anonymous French artist Space Invader is currently showing his latest exhibition called Hello My Game Is at Le Musee en Herbe in Paris, France. According to museum press release, this is Invader’s first indoor exhibition in Paris since 2011. Being that his work brings nostalgia back to our youthful days with 8-bit video games, it seems fitting that his museum show is at a children’s museum, although that is not to say it isn’t equally entertaining and engaging for the adult fans of Invader. The more surprising part is that a children’s museum invited a notorious street “vandal” (Invader has been arrested several times as a vandal for placing his works on the street), but I think that’s more a statement on how street art in general has become accepted by the worldwide mainstream.

His usual repertoire of works is well represented here, from sculptures to invasion “aliases” like those seen on the streets and “Rubik Cubism” works that are usually seen at his gallery shows. The subject matters of the works are just as wide ranging. My favorite work is the scene from the Disney movie Peter Pan made with Rubik’s cube pieces.

Enjoy these highlights from the show. Picture credits go to friends of BDAB in Paris. You know who you are!

– Paris, France

Peter Pan and the Lost Boys
Rubik Cubism

Can’t beat a New York pepperoni pizza slice, especially if you’re a young mutant turtle that knows karate

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LA Art Book Fair (LAABF) is this Weekend 2/23-26 @ Geffen Contemporary MOCA

LA Art Book Fair 2017

The 5th iteration of Printed Matter’s LA Art Book Fair is this weekend at the Geffen of MOCA. Thursday, February 23, is the preview night, which is open to museum members for free and $10 for the public. From Friday to Sunday is free to the general public.

I was there last year, and it’s amazing to see so many people in the art communities come together in the huge museum floor. There are all kinds of zines, books, rare prints, and merch available for you to browse and purchase. It’s a great event for collectors, so if you’re in the area, definitely go visit.

Group Show “TASTEE” Opens at New Image Art

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New Image Art in West Hollywood opened another great show this past Saturday with a cast of artists from their stable ranging from emerging to establishment, and everyone else in between.

The piece that stole show was, by far, the towering and dazzling Retna (@ironeyeretna) below. For those of you interested in acquiring a work of this size from the street-artist-turned-super-star, be ready to plunk down six figures.

Retna's contribution to the group show
Retna’s contribution to the group show

If a solo show from a particular artist captures the state of mind of the artist over the course of execution of the artworks, then a well curated group show can capture the zeitgeist of the present through a diverse set of voices.

Below are a selection of works that caught my attention at the show.  If you are in the area, head over to the gallery to see the rest in person.  Tell’em BDAB sent ya.

Monica Kim Garza (@monicakimgarza)
Monica Kim Garza (@monicakimgarza)
Bast (@bastny)
Bast (@bastny)

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Judith Supine (@judithsupine)
Judith Supine (@judithsupine)
Carlos Ramirez of Date Farmers
Carlos Ramirez of Date Farmers

Revok’s “SYSTEMS” Show Opens @ LA Library Street Collective Gallery

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Los Angeles’s own Revok stepped further into the fine art world this weekend with his new show at Library Street Collective‘s space in Mid-City, Los Angeles.  Titled “SYSTEMS”, it explores several ideas on canvas, a first for the artist to use this medium for an exhibit, and blank metal street signs, a medium he is, without a doubt, familiar with from his days as a graffiti writer (Ironic note: Apparently Revok’s vendor for the street signs is also Los Angeles city’s street sign supplier).

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This piece was the star of the show, not only in its size but also in its complexity in execution, especially since all the other pieces in the show seemed straight forward.  This is from a series called “Tape Loop Paintings”, created by rolling a paint covered paint roller wound with tape and transferring its paint onto the canvas surface with all its idiosyncrasies.  It was really tough to get this shot with so many people hovering over it to figure out how it was painted.

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This grouping was my favorite from the show, just because of the engineering that took to create the pieces.  When I see these, in my mind I’m trying to design my own version of the jig that Revok uses in the Instagram video below.  This series is titled “Instrument Exercises”.  Watch the video and you’ll see why.

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Painting. #JasonREVOK

A post shared by Jason Revok (@_revok_) on

8 spray cans ejecting its content in exact synchronicity…  It is completely mechanical, but there’s still poetry in it.

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“Anti-paintings”.  These felt sophomoric.  The artist first painted names of passed friends and family on the blank street signs, then scrubbed them out, only blotches and silhouettes of the original being left behind.  Decorative at least, meditative at most.

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The last of the 4 series included in the show is titled “Self Portraits”, which aren’t self portraits at all, at least not in the traditional sense.  Cloths that were on his studio floor for the last months to years were stretched onto painted canvas surfaces.  Like the Anti-paintings, these fell short for me.  I couldn’t get a good picture of the series, but you can see parts of them in the left-hand side of the above photo.

Overall, it was a fun show with large crowds taking in the creative atmosphere in the room.  Although this feels like Revok’s foray into the more traditional white-walls-gallery type shows, the tools that he utilizes to accomplish it are not traditional at all.  I’m looking forward to the next phase of ingenuity from Revok, #JasonRevok.

-Los Angeles, CA

“Learning the Magic of Painting”

 

The Japanese superstar artist Takashi Murakami’s newest show titled Learning the Magic of Painting is opening this Saturday, 9/10/16, at Galerie Perrotin in Paris.  It is his newest show, but I don’t think all the pieces included are new because I’ve seen some of these pieces exhibited at his last show in Tokyo, Takashi Murakami: The 500 Arhats (hit the link to find my highlights from the show at Mori Art Museum earlier this year).

Unfortunately, or fortunately for my bank account, BDAB won’t be able to make it to Paris to attend the show, but here are some of my favorite Murakami works from the last year that I had the opportunity to enjoy in person.

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Meet KAWS’s Newest Muse

Kaws's iconic Companion in black. via kawsone.com
Kaws’s iconic Companion in black. via kawsone.com

Over the years, the one-time street artist KAWS has given the KAWS treatment to many familiar pop icons. His first ever foray into popular culture saw the birth of his Companion in the visage of Mickey Mouse.

In the last few years, we’ve seen everything from Spongebob to Snoopy given the crossed out eyes in his paintings and sculptures.

via arrestedmotion.com
via arrestedmotion.com

Well, it looks like the artist has found his newest muse as revealed in The Creators’s exclusive preview of his first museum show in the UK simply titled KAWS. The show will be on display from February 6th to June 12th at the Longside Gallery of Yorkshire Sculpture Park.

So who’s KAW’s newest muse? It’s Elmo…

Survival Machine, 2015. Exclusive from The Creators.
Survival Machine, 2015. Exclusive from The Creators.
Survival Machine, 2015. Exclusive from The Creators.
Survival Machine, 2015. Exclusive from The Creators.
Survival Machine, 2015. Exclusive from The Creators.
Survival Machine, 2015. Exclusive from The Creators.

“The 500 Arhats” from the Mind of Takashi Murakami

The 500 Arhats [Blue Dragon], 2012
The 500 Arhats [Blue Dragon], 2012
The 500 Arhats [White Tiger], 2012
The 500 Arhats [White Tiger], 2012
The 500 Arhats [Vermilion Bird], 2012
The 500 Arhats [Vermilion Bird], 2012
The 500 Arhats [Black Tortoise], 2012
The 500 Arhats [Black Tortoise], 2012
Takashi Murakami: 500 Arhats at Mori Art Museum is Takashi Murakami’s first major solo exhibition in Japan in 14 years since the show at Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo in 2001. Despite being a Japanese artist and producing his works in Japan, Murakami has not been an active participant of Japanese contemporary art. Majority of his works are found in foreign museums and private collections, mostly in Europe and US with Middle East and China quickly catching up, but market in Japan for Murakami’s work is described as “nearly non-existent”. This could most likely be attributed to the artist’s ambivalence to the role of Japanese contemporary art in the global context, which meant that Murakami has heavily focused on showing his work to an international audience outside of his home country.

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So why return to Japan to show his most ambitious painting to date? The curator of the show Miki Akiko offers several possible reasons: Murakami had a deep respect for the late founder of Mori Art Museum, Minoru Mori, who devoted his life to a single vision of building Tokyo into the burgeoning city we know now. In that sense, Mori and Murakami were cut from the same cloth. Another reason might be that this show is a big “f-you” to the Japanese critics who never really considered him to be of importance. Conversely, it is also a big “thank you” to the 300+ young staff of his studio that collaborated with the artist to complete this huge project in less than a year. But most importantly, it is a word of encouragement to the Japanese people that suffered so greatly during the 2011 Tohoku tsunami and earthquakes and a warning siren to carefully consider new nuclear plant plans and prepare for future natural disasters.
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Although there are 40 new paintings and sculptures from the artist on display, as the title of the show suggests, the main event is the 100 meter wide painting, The 500 Arhats. The painting was started just shortly before the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011 and first displayed in an incomplete form in Qatar as a show of gratitude to the nation that promptly came to the aid of Japan in the wake of the disaster.

The 500 Arhats are Buddha’s enlightened disciples, the equivalent of saints in Christianity, and are believed to possess supernatural powers and able to heal 500 different types of suffering. In addition to the arhats, the painting includes 4 creatures of Chinese myth that preside over each of the cardinal directions: Blue Dragon in the east, Whiter Tiger in the west, Vermillion Bird in the south, and Black Tortoise in the north.

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The studio system that Murakami has optimized over the last two decades is just as interesting as the painting itself. His 9000m2 studio space had to be renovated to fit 50m sections of The 500 Arhats painting. Over 200 art university students were recruited from across the country, similar to how Japanese talent scouts discover new idol singers. The staff were then divided into shifts that spanned the full 24 hours per day. The days started with radio calisthenics exercises and morning meetings to confirm the daily work schedules for each artist/worker. Workflows and maps of placements of each of the 4000 silk screens to be applied to the painting were developed. Research teams collected over 100 file books of material on each of the 500 arhats, mythical creatures, monsters, and background motifs. Of course, every element to be included in the work was personally drawn or approved by the artist himself. Some may criticize his efficient studio system as being a product of greed, but it is more likely a result of the artist’s desire to have more time to devote to fine-tuning the details.

Some of the research materials and drawings created in preparation for The 500 Arhats.
Some of the research materials and drawings created in preparation for The 500 Arhats.

Please click on the thumbnails above to see much larger images of the 500 Arhats. The images were photographed section by section and stitched together in Photoshop, but they are no substitute for standing in front of the painting and admiring the awe-inspiring and painstaking details that Takashi Murakami included in each square-inch of the panels.

Can you spot all the 500 arhats?

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The two videos below should give a better spatial sense of the enormity of The 500 Arhats.

-Tokyo, Japan