KAWS for Interview Magazine.

Joe 06.06.10

I came across a really good interview that KAWS did for Interview magazine.  Toby Maguire conducted the interview and it is a nice read. Check it out.

The Williamsburg studio of the artist known as KAWS is neatly lined with racks of acrylic-paint bottles in primary colors and guarded by a cluster of standing toy collectibles—life-size 3-D comic book characters of his own design—like a platoon of robot children. By the window, there is a small-scale model of the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, in Connecticut. KAWS, an unassuming, soft-spoken 35-year-old New Jersey native named Brian Donnelly, is plotting his first solo museum show at the Aldrich next month. It will serve as the unofficial grand induction to the institutionalized art world for the graffiti artist, painter, illustrator, sculptor, toymaker, and product designer. Yet KAWS has a long history outside of the white cube. His street-born cartoonish graphics—specifically spermatozoa-shaped figures with x-ed out eyes—have achieved a subcultural iconography. He has applied this KAWS signature to his street art, a clothing line, heroically outsize toys and sculptures, and countless cobranding ventures with labels like A Bathing Ape and Marc Jacobs.

KAWS was a teenager growing up in Jersey City in the late ’80s and early ’90s, where he spent his high school years graffiti-bombing trains, walls, and billboards. He honed his street-art act in New York City, hanging out with the spray can–wielding skate kids in downtown Manhattan. He graduated to a more covert form of interventionist street art in the mid-’90s, when he began unlocking the glass panels encasing bus stop and phone booth ads. He stole the posters, added his own graphics to them in acrylic paint, and then surreptitiously put them back. These hits were so skillfully executed—brushstrokes are never apparent in a KAWS painting—that often no one could distinguish the artist’s work from the original advertisement.

After graduating from New York’s School of Visual Arts in 1996, KAWS traveled to Japan, pursuing his street-art projects with Tokyo subculture heavyweights Hectic and Jun Takahashi of Undercover. In 1999, KAWS made his first toy with Japanese company Bounty Hunter,a vinyl figure of Mickey Mouse with x-ed out eyes (as if Mickey just drank from a bottle marked POISON). Nigo, the tastemaker behind A Bathing Ape, asked KAWS to collaborate on a clothing line in 2001 and began collecting his pop paintings of cartoon characters like the Simpsons, the Smurfs, and SpongeBob SquarePants.

Channeling the commercialist attitude of Claes Oldenburg and, more recently, Takashi Murakami, KAWS has produced everything from x-marked sneakers for Nike to an album cover for a special edition of Kanye West’s 808s & Heartbreak (2008). To sell all the KAWS-mobilia, the artist opened a dazzling Masamichi Katayama–designed store in Tokyo in 2006 called OriginalFake. Although KAWS does not separate product from art or art from product, it was only a matter of time before the art world caught up with him. He found Los Angeles–based dealer Honor Fraser, who took on not only the paintings but the whole breadth of his work.

With a monograph from Skira/Rizzoli due out this fall and the Aldrich show at his doorstep, KAWS has gotten approval from an art-world establishment that he felt would never take his guerrilla act as its own. He bought a building not far from his Brooklyn studio, which his good friend, the interior designer Katayama, will convert into a massive studio that will become the creative hub of the KAWS universe. That’s all in the future, but it is one KAWS can see from the seventh-floor window of his current studio—which is where the actor Tobey Maguire, a fan, friend, and collector, interviewed the artist.

Click here to view the full interview

Zakka Store DUMBO NYC, Mathmatiks art show May 29, 2010

Joe 05.29.10

Last night we co-sponsored an art show at the Zakka Shop in Brooklyn.  The event was hosted by Mathmatiks and the turnout was great.   It featured works by Nick Kuszyk, Jade Kuei, El Kamino, Chip 7 and Pars Kid.  We gave out over 100 copies of The Art of Storytelling magazine and we also released our first figure called eyeball kid which was a collaboration between The Art of Storytelling, Chip7 and sculptor Danny the Farrow.   All in all it was a great night.  Zakka is now carrying The Art of Storytelling Magazine as well as The Art of Storytelling DVD so if you need copies of either you can pick them up there.

Outside of the event, the shop itself is amazing.  They are stacked with vinyl toys, a ton a rare books and dvd’s, clothing and more. You should definitely stop by to check this place out.  Here are some flicks from the event.

CLICK HERE TO SEE MORE FROM THE SHOW >

New Gene Simmons Sculpt by The Farrow

The Farrow 05.20.10

Here is one of my new Gene Simmons sculpts for an upcoming custom figure I will be creating.  I just have to figure out which era I want to use it for.  I will make one with pupils and one without.  I will post the photos when it is finished.  Hit me up if there are any customs you would like to see in the future.

- The Farrow

Chip figures are in!

Joe 05.20.10

Just came home to a batch of our first figure, Eyeball Kid by Chip 7.  The molds and paint job came great.  The mold maker did a good job preserving all the detail which was my biggest concern.  We are doing 30 figures in the black color way.  We will have them at the Zakka store for May 25th’s show.  I am going to stop by uncle Nooche’s house tonight an we are going to start the assembly process.  Really stoked to see the finished product.  I will post shots once they are fully assembled.

Zakka Store Brooklyn

Joe 05.13.10

Hey everyone, I know it has been a long time since we last posted, but we have been hard on the grind working on the online shop, our new toy and also our first book.  Once we finish up the online shop we will be updating this site with a lot of interviews.  Hopefully in about a week…..web design = headache : (  can’t wait to get past it.

At any rate, on May 28th 2010 we are co-sponsoring a show at the Zakka Store in Brooklyn.  There will be artwork by Chip7, El Kamino, Jade Kuei, Mathmatiks, Nicholas Kuszyk and Parskid.  We will be giving out free copies of issue#1 of The Art of Storytelling.  We will also be revealing our first toy, Eyeball Kid which is a collaboration between The Art of Storytelling, Chip 7 and Sculptor Danny “The Farrow.”  We will have a limited amount of toys for sale at the show, so get there early.