Pipes
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,438
๐๐ป 2,883
January 2012
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Pipes on Sept 25, 2014 13:26:39 GMT 1,
|
|
Dungle
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,008
๐๐ป 5,174
June 2011
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Dungle on Sept 25, 2014 16:57:23 GMT 1, Canvas that inspired todays piece: Is it me, or does this guy look like Kevin Spacey a couple hundred years ago? Planning to check out the show, but so far can't say that I am blown away by much other than the production/marketing push by Laz.... No, its Ray Winstone.
Canvas that inspired todays piece: Is it me, or does this guy look like Kevin Spacey a couple hundred years ago? Planning to check out the show, but so far can't say that I am blown away by much other than the production/marketing push by Laz.... No, its Ray Winstone.
|
|
Fะฏ
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 8,264
๐๐ป 9,252
May 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Fะฏ on Sept 25, 2014 16:58:08 GMT 1, Is it me, or does this guy look like Kevin Spacey a couple hundred years ago? Planning to check out the show, but so far can't say that I am blown away by much other than the production/marketing push by Laz.... No, its Ray Winstone. BET ON THIS GAME YOU SLAAAAAAAAG. IM RAY WINSTONE.
Is it me, or does this guy look like Kevin Spacey a couple hundred years ago? Planning to check out the show, but so far can't say that I am blown away by much other than the production/marketing push by Laz.... No, its Ray Winstone. BET ON THIS GAME YOU SLAAAAAAAAG. IM RAY WINSTONE.
|
|
Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Deleted on Sept 25, 2014 21:31:26 GMT 1, I accept that different people are attracted to different genres but I reckon the marketing push is driven by demand and not a load of bellends with pony tails and red rimmed glasses....
And yeah, I know that was a stupid generalisation borne from the late 80's...
I accept that different people are attracted to different genres but I reckon the marketing push is driven by demand and not a load of bellends with pony tails and red rimmed glasses....
And yeah, I know that was a stupid generalisation borne from the late 80's...
|
|
nighthawk
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,338
๐๐ป 1,219
February 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by nighthawk on Sept 26, 2014 0:22:04 GMT 1, Gawd I like that one
|
|
bone
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 416
๐๐ป 157
September 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by bone on Sept 30, 2014 17:12:35 GMT 1, Anyone know when these are going to start shipping? For my $90 shipping I thought they would have been here the day after I purchased....
Anyone know when these are going to start shipping? For my $90 shipping I thought they would have been here the day after I purchased....
|
|
|
tas
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 597
๐๐ป 627
June 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by tas on Sept 30, 2014 17:13:58 GMT 1, There was a notation on the purchase page/confirmation about 28 days I think.
There was a notation on the purchase page/confirmation about 28 days I think.
|
|
WOOF
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,464
๐๐ป 4,762
March 2014
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by WOOF on Sept 30, 2014 17:18:17 GMT 1, There was a notation on the purchase page/confirmation about 28 days I think. I asked at the show, they said if they haven't already shipped, they will very soon.
There was a notation on the purchase page/confirmation about 28 days I think. I asked at the show, they said if they haven't already shipped, they will very soon.
|
|
|
tas
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 597
๐๐ป 627
June 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by tas on Oct 3, 2014 16:32:11 GMT 1, Just got shipping notice.
Just got shipping notice.
|
|
vei
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,830
๐๐ป 975
February 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by vei on Oct 3, 2014 16:33:19 GMT 1, Anyone received theirs yet?
Anyone received theirs yet?
|
|
nighthawk
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,338
๐๐ป 1,219
February 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by nighthawk on Oct 3, 2014 16:43:36 GMT 1, I imagine they're just going out?
I imagine they're just going out?
|
|
probored
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 436
๐๐ป 490
June 2014
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by probored on Oct 3, 2014 16:59:35 GMT 1, Anyone want to sell theirs? PM me your price (including shipping to the Netherlands) and where you are shipping from? Thanks.
edit: please note I am aware of the prices on ebay.
Anyone want to sell theirs? PM me your price (including shipping to the Netherlands) and where you are shipping from? Thanks.
edit: please note I am aware of the prices on ebay.
|
|
Poster Bob
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 5,895
๐๐ป 5,536
September 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Poster Bob on Oct 3, 2014 17:07:42 GMT 1, Anyone received theirs yet? Some guy on Ebay has said that his is in hand. No idea how that happened but I remember seeing it at least two days ago.
Anyone received theirs yet? Some guy on Ebay has said that his is in hand. No idea how that happened but I remember seeing it at least two days ago.
|
|
|
randomname
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,962
๐๐ป 1,810
June 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by randomname on Oct 3, 2014 17:22:58 GMT 1, Anyone received theirs yet? Some guy on Ebay has said that his is in hand. No idea how that happened but I remember seeing it at least two days ago. It's possible that they're mailing them out over several days. For the $90 shipping, I would have liked it hand delivered the next day. Maybe with a back rub if that's not asking too much.
Anyone received theirs yet? Some guy on Ebay has said that his is in hand. No idea how that happened but I remember seeing it at least two days ago. It's possible that they're mailing them out over several days. For the $90 shipping, I would have liked it hand delivered the next day. Maybe with a back rub if that's not asking too much.
|
|
dreadnatty
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 5,431
๐๐ป 6,992
February 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by dreadnatty on Oct 4, 2014 2:47:55 GMT 1, Artist Conor Harrington Discusses How Hip-Hop and Fallen Empires Inspired His "Eat and Delete" Exhibition in New York
www.complex.com/style/2014/10/conor-harrington-interview
Entering Conor Harringtonโs "Eat and Delete" show at the Old Gym on Mulberry Street in New York is kind of like walking into a 360-degree movie theater. Itโs nearly pitch black, save the spotlight in the middle, and the massive paintings surrounding the room are each about the size of a movie screen, making one endless circle of art. The sheer scale is overwhelming enough, but then you settle in and realize heโs created hyperrealistic paintings of 19th-century aristocracy getting all kinds of freaky, and the next layer of shock and awe settles in.
Harrington was never going to create your typical white-walled gallery show. About 20 years ago, long before the Ireland-born, London-based artist was examining the excess of long dead aristocracy, he was throwing hip-hop nights in Ireland and tagging the streets as quickly as he could, in whatever spaces he could find.
Those days are no longer. Eventually he moved into the world of murals, and now, he sees bigger as better. Harrington might have his very own gallery spaces, but he still canโt ignore those hip-hop ticks. Hip-hop raised Harrington, so to him, visuals of a power-hungry Napoleon are really just like a gluttonous Rick Ross draped in gold chains.
The gallery show ends tomorrow (Saturday, October 4, 2014), so you might not get the full movie theater effect, but read below to see how Harrington got to "Eat and Delete."โ
What was the hip-hop scene in Ireland like? Ireland has always had a small, really tight-knit group of MCs and DJs. Itโs a really small country; weโve got about 4 million people, so the amount of people back in the '90s who were into hip-hop was quite small. Everybody clicked together. About 10 to 12 years ago, I got close with a group of DJs and MCs, and we used to put on hip-hop nights. We were all from different parts of the country, so weโd get together at the club. Obviously, now with the Internet, itโs a completely different story. It exposes everything to everybody.
How did you transition from graffiti to fine art? It was a gradual thing. I donโt call myself a graffiti writer, and I donโt call myself a street artist. I donโt call myself a fine artist. I just call myself a painter and I still see myself as a painter on a journey. Itโs been 20 years since I first tagged, so 20 years out, god knows what Iโll be doing. I always want to see how far I can push what Iโm doing, so I keep pushing myself.
Whatโs the story behind "Eat and Delete"โ? Itโs a continuation of my work over the last four years. Iโm interested in systems of power and excess, and thatโs where the eat aspect comes fromโthe excess and unrelenting desire for power and control. The delete aspect comes from what happens after that unrelenting desire for control.
Itโs a story of power and colonialism and empires that build up and fall. Itโs about the rise of power and the fall of power. The eat is the excess, and the delete is the drop. I donโt remember the exact line, but itโs actually from a track on the Nas and Damian Marley collaboration album. Nas says, โEat, sleep, delete,โ or something like that. I was like โAh! Ok.โ So I took the eat and delete. It makes sense with the rises and falls Iโm interested in.
The prequel to "Eat and Delete" was called "Dead Meat." Why the food obsession? I suppose itโs just the hunger and the idea of hunger in general. Youโre hungry for food or youโre hungry for powerโitโs the same motion. The same kind of feeling. Iโm looking at the powerful people and what theyโre hungry for. Theyโre hungry for power, hungry for excess, hungry for everything. Eating is just that general sense of nonstop hunger, nonstop feeding themselves.
Do you set any limitations on what you eat? No, I really enjoy my food. The only thing I donโt eat is mushrooms. The taste and the texture remind me of slugs.
Do you limit yourself in any other ways? My paintings are really rich and decadent, but Iโm not like that at all. My life is quite lowkey and humble, to a degree. I just paint and chill a lot. Iโm not like my paintings, if thatโs what youโre wondering. Itโs just an interest. Somebody could say every painting is a self-portrait, but for me the painting is the opposite of me.
Iโm not an overly masculine or egotistical kind of guy, but Iโm interested in these guys. I grew up with graffiti and hip-hop, and that whole world is quite masculine and egotistical. Itโs all about bragging, and itโs kind of similar to these European colonial powers. It might look like history, but itโs more about the present. When I started painting the kind of Napoleonic early 19th-century generals with big hats and chains and stuff, it was like painting Slick Rick with all his jewelry and bling. Itโs all power dressingโdressing like a peacock. And for me, it all comes from hip-hop. Hip-hopโs about battling and competition, and the language of hip-hop is very militaristic. There are huge parallels between the two, even though theyโre obviously hundreds of years apart.
Then why use images with such historical context? The paintings look like historical paintings, but itโs not about that. Thereโs a painting in the show called The Unveiling, where thereโs a girl lying on the table, and sheโs being unveiled. Thereโs a guy unveiling her, and thereโs a guy sitting on the chair watching. That painting is actually about downloaded porn. The girl is the object, unfortunately, and sheโs being unveiled by a guy, just like I imagine a majority of people pulling the strings in the porn industry are men, and most of the consumers, like the guy sitting down, are men, as well. So although it looks like this kind of 18th century decadent painting, itโs actually about pornography and how weโre consuming it.
These paintings are huge, and youโve also done some murals around New York City recently. What do you think about the impact of scale? Why create something so big? On the street, the bigger the better; the bigger it is, the bigger the impact. Painting on the street is funny, because youโre putting something out into the public, but youโre not really asking the publicโs permission. The wall could be a fully legal wall, but you donโt really have permission to paint there. I havenโt asked everybody in the neighborhood, โAre you ok if I do this?โ I come to a country, paint a huge wall, and then never see it again, whereas the people in the area have to live with it. So itโs a funny thing from an impact point of view, but from an artistic point of view, the bigger, the more impact, the better.
When I first started tagging, everything was on such a small scale. Now Iโm doing a four or five-storey wall in TriBeCa. Iโm paying for the paint, and Iโve become a painter, so itโs all good.
Walking into the gallery space made me think that I was in a 360-degree movie theater. I was hoping you would be engulfed by them. The paintings are quite big, so I wanted the viewer to be surrounded by them like walking into an arena. Thatโs why I made the spotlight in the center. Itโs Like the gladiator.
Do you listen to music when you paint? Yes.
What did you listen to when you were making this? I listened to a lot of new hip-hop. My favorite group at the moment is Run the Jewels with El-P and Killer Mike. I like Action Bronson and all kinds of stuff from Joey Bada$$. I also listened to a lot of Nicolas Jaar and electronic music. This guy called Nils Frahm from Berlin is a classical musician who makes electronic music. Itโs very cinematic, swooping, electronic/orchestral music. The proportions of my paintings are widescreen like cinema and film, and a lot of soundtrack stuff gets me going.
Artist Conor Harrington Discusses How Hip-Hop and Fallen Empires Inspired His "Eat and Delete" Exhibition in New York www.complex.com/style/2014/10/conor-harrington-interviewEntering Conor Harringtonโs "Eat and Delete" show at the Old Gym on Mulberry Street in New York is kind of like walking into a 360-degree movie theater. Itโs nearly pitch black, save the spotlight in the middle, and the massive paintings surrounding the room are each about the size of a movie screen, making one endless circle of art. The sheer scale is overwhelming enough, but then you settle in and realize heโs created hyperrealistic paintings of 19th-century aristocracy getting all kinds of freaky, and the next layer of shock and awe settles in. Harrington was never going to create your typical white-walled gallery show. About 20 years ago, long before the Ireland-born, London-based artist was examining the excess of long dead aristocracy, he was throwing hip-hop nights in Ireland and tagging the streets as quickly as he could, in whatever spaces he could find. Those days are no longer. Eventually he moved into the world of murals, and now, he sees bigger as better. Harrington might have his very own gallery spaces, but he still canโt ignore those hip-hop ticks. Hip-hop raised Harrington, so to him, visuals of a power-hungry Napoleon are really just like a gluttonous Rick Ross draped in gold chains. The gallery show ends tomorrow (Saturday, October 4, 2014), so you might not get the full movie theater effect, but read below to see how Harrington got to "Eat and Delete."โ What was the hip-hop scene in Ireland like? Ireland has always had a small, really tight-knit group of MCs and DJs. Itโs a really small country; weโve got about 4 million people, so the amount of people back in the '90s who were into hip-hop was quite small. Everybody clicked together. About 10 to 12 years ago, I got close with a group of DJs and MCs, and we used to put on hip-hop nights. We were all from different parts of the country, so weโd get together at the club. Obviously, now with the Internet, itโs a completely different story. It exposes everything to everybody. How did you transition from graffiti to fine art? It was a gradual thing. I donโt call myself a graffiti writer, and I donโt call myself a street artist. I donโt call myself a fine artist. I just call myself a painter and I still see myself as a painter on a journey. Itโs been 20 years since I first tagged, so 20 years out, god knows what Iโll be doing. I always want to see how far I can push what Iโm doing, so I keep pushing myself. Whatโs the story behind "Eat and Delete"โ? Itโs a continuation of my work over the last four years. Iโm interested in systems of power and excess, and thatโs where the eat aspect comes fromโthe excess and unrelenting desire for power and control. The delete aspect comes from what happens after that unrelenting desire for control. Itโs a story of power and colonialism and empires that build up and fall. Itโs about the rise of power and the fall of power. The eat is the excess, and the delete is the drop. I donโt remember the exact line, but itโs actually from a track on the Nas and Damian Marley collaboration album. Nas says, โEat, sleep, delete,โ or something like that. I was like โAh! Ok.โ So I took the eat and delete. It makes sense with the rises and falls Iโm interested in. The prequel to "Eat and Delete" was called "Dead Meat." Why the food obsession? I suppose itโs just the hunger and the idea of hunger in general. Youโre hungry for food or youโre hungry for powerโitโs the same motion. The same kind of feeling. Iโm looking at the powerful people and what theyโre hungry for. Theyโre hungry for power, hungry for excess, hungry for everything. Eating is just that general sense of nonstop hunger, nonstop feeding themselves. Do you set any limitations on what you eat? No, I really enjoy my food. The only thing I donโt eat is mushrooms. The taste and the texture remind me of slugs. Do you limit yourself in any other ways? My paintings are really rich and decadent, but Iโm not like that at all. My life is quite lowkey and humble, to a degree. I just paint and chill a lot. Iโm not like my paintings, if thatโs what youโre wondering. Itโs just an interest. Somebody could say every painting is a self-portrait, but for me the painting is the opposite of me. Iโm not an overly masculine or egotistical kind of guy, but Iโm interested in these guys. I grew up with graffiti and hip-hop, and that whole world is quite masculine and egotistical. Itโs all about bragging, and itโs kind of similar to these European colonial powers. It might look like history, but itโs more about the present. When I started painting the kind of Napoleonic early 19th-century generals with big hats and chains and stuff, it was like painting Slick Rick with all his jewelry and bling. Itโs all power dressingโdressing like a peacock. And for me, it all comes from hip-hop. Hip-hopโs about battling and competition, and the language of hip-hop is very militaristic. There are huge parallels between the two, even though theyโre obviously hundreds of years apart. Then why use images with such historical context? The paintings look like historical paintings, but itโs not about that. Thereโs a painting in the show called The Unveiling, where thereโs a girl lying on the table, and sheโs being unveiled. Thereโs a guy unveiling her, and thereโs a guy sitting on the chair watching. That painting is actually about downloaded porn. The girl is the object, unfortunately, and sheโs being unveiled by a guy, just like I imagine a majority of people pulling the strings in the porn industry are men, and most of the consumers, like the guy sitting down, are men, as well. So although it looks like this kind of 18th century decadent painting, itโs actually about pornography and how weโre consuming it. These paintings are huge, and youโve also done some murals around New York City recently. What do you think about the impact of scale? Why create something so big? On the street, the bigger the better; the bigger it is, the bigger the impact. Painting on the street is funny, because youโre putting something out into the public, but youโre not really asking the publicโs permission. The wall could be a fully legal wall, but you donโt really have permission to paint there. I havenโt asked everybody in the neighborhood, โAre you ok if I do this?โ I come to a country, paint a huge wall, and then never see it again, whereas the people in the area have to live with it. So itโs a funny thing from an impact point of view, but from an artistic point of view, the bigger, the more impact, the better. When I first started tagging, everything was on such a small scale. Now Iโm doing a four or five-storey wall in TriBeCa. Iโm paying for the paint, and Iโve become a painter, so itโs all good. Walking into the gallery space made me think that I was in a 360-degree movie theater. I was hoping you would be engulfed by them. The paintings are quite big, so I wanted the viewer to be surrounded by them like walking into an arena. Thatโs why I made the spotlight in the center. Itโs Like the gladiator. Do you listen to music when you paint? Yes. What did you listen to when you were making this? I listened to a lot of new hip-hop. My favorite group at the moment is Run the Jewels with El-P and Killer Mike. I like Action Bronson and all kinds of stuff from Joey Bada$$. I also listened to a lot of Nicolas Jaar and electronic music. This guy called Nils Frahm from Berlin is a classical musician who makes electronic music. Itโs very cinematic, swooping, electronic/orchestral music. The proportions of my paintings are widescreen like cinema and film, and a lot of soundtrack stuff gets me going.
|
|
Dungle
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,008
๐๐ป 5,174
June 2011
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Dungle on Oct 4, 2014 6:30:22 GMT 1, Thanks for posting dreadnatty finally some comment on the art and not the value of the prints.
Slightly disconcerting explanation behind the unveiling too!
Thanks for posting dreadnatty finally some comment on the art and not the value of the prints. Slightly disconcerting explanation behind the unveiling too!
|
|
Swiss Alan
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 436
๐๐ป 266
March 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Swiss Alan on Oct 4, 2014 8:33:18 GMT 1, I imagine they're just going out? They're outnow - I've recieved mine. If you haven't got it yet you should be soon
I imagine they're just going out? They're outnow - I've recieved mine. If you haven't got it yet you should be soon
|
|
Momo
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,034
๐๐ป 601
March 2014
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Momo on Oct 4, 2014 13:07:27 GMT 1, The porn thing is exactly how I explained the unveiling to herself when she asked me..(its funny how the lil things like reading a piece the way the artist meant for them to be read can make you feel)
The porn thing is exactly how I explained the unveiling to herself when she asked me..(its funny how the lil things like reading a piece the way the artist meant for them to be read can make you feel)
|
|
vei
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,830
๐๐ป 975
February 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by vei on Oct 4, 2014 14:56:27 GMT 1, Any comments of what people think of the prints now they physically have them?
Any comments of what people think of the prints now they physically have them?
|
|
Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Deleted on Oct 4, 2014 19:18:11 GMT 1, I'm not sure they do physically have them....?
I'm not sure they do physically have them....?
|
|
tas
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 597
๐๐ป 627
June 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by tas on Oct 6, 2014 14:44:26 GMT 1, FedEx just dropped this off. Wonder what it could be... ;-)
FedEx just dropped this off. Wonder what it could be... ;-)
|
|
|
tas
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 597
๐๐ป 627
June 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by tas on Oct 6, 2014 14:52:12 GMT 1,
|
|
DREAMERS
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 762
๐๐ป 397
July 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by DREAMERS on Oct 6, 2014 14:59:05 GMT 1,
Beautiful piece!
|
|
WOOF
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,464
๐๐ป 4,762
March 2014
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by WOOF on Oct 6, 2014 14:59:27 GMT 1, Looks great!
Looks great!
|
|
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Limited Prints on Oct 6, 2014 15:06:45 GMT 1, FedEx just dropped this off. Wonder what it could be... ;-) what state u located in bud
FedEx just dropped this off. Wonder what it could be... ;-) what state u located in bud
|
|
tas
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 597
๐๐ป 627
June 2013
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by tas on Oct 6, 2014 15:09:53 GMT 1, FedEx just dropped this off. Wonder what it could be... ;-) what state u located in bud New York
FedEx just dropped this off. Wonder what it could be... ;-) what state u located in bud New York
|
|
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Limited Prints on Oct 6, 2014 15:16:55 GMT 1, sweet just got email from flight logistics. says its been signed for. (at old address) headed to pick that bad boy up.
sweet just got email from flight logistics. says its been signed for. (at old address) headed to pick that bad boy up.
|
|
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Coach on Oct 6, 2014 16:02:16 GMT 1,
Looks smashing!!
|
|
|
Conor Harrington | The Unveiling | The Outsiders, by Hooked on Art on Oct 6, 2014 16:48:18 GMT 1, Very jealous of that "Tas"... What a stunning print ;-)
Very jealous of that "Tas"... What a stunning print ;-)
|
|