Posts Tagged ‘mark gonzales’

Exhibits We Love :: Art in the Streets pt2

Exhibits We Love :: Art in the Streets pt2

Our photos from MOCA’s Art in the Streets continue with a few of our favorites, beginning with Mister Cartoon. His sexy ice cream truck installation captures a slice of the LA cholo scene in beautiful detail. Also on the LA tip, there’s a couple of protest posters by Robbie Conal: Contra Cocaine, dealing with the Iran-Contra-Crack epidemic from 1987 and Little White Lies featuring right-wing fundamentalist Jesse Helms.
On a lighter note, we had a good laugh with NeckFace’s installation & “performance” piece as a dirty bum, which may have been a preview treat. We also enjoyed the two Malcolm Mclaren memorabilia cases, the Lee Quinones tribute wall and Mode 2′s celebratory mural. Don’t miss Martha Cooper’s photography room featuring a wall of artists including one of our faves, Doze Green and look our upcoming FWL Axis profile with her. We included a few other pics for those who won’t be able to make it to the show : ) – Moni Vargas


Exhibits We Love :: Art in the Streets

Exhibits We Love :: Art in the Streets

We had the pleasure of going to the MOCA preview of Art in the Streets and although a few of our favorite artists were not included, we couldn’t help but be infinitely inspired by the mere scope of the show, the well deserved recognition of the movement and the incredible works and worlds assembled. We took a few photos for those of you who won’t be in LA in the next months to see it. For those of you who are going, don’t miss Rammallzee’s room, Os Gemeos, the amazing time line, Martha Cooper’s room, Mister Cartoon, Swoon, Roa, Chalfant & the sweet Invader pieces.

In the meantime, take a look at our short doc profiles with Invader and Kenny Scharf.


Videos We Love – Blind “Video Days: 20 Year Reunion”

Videos We Love - Blind "Video Days: 20 Year Reunion"

Blind “Video Days: 20 Year Reunion Photo Shoot” – Don’t know what’s harder to believe…(A) The fact that Spike Jonze’s skate vid masterpiece “Video Days” just had it’s 20 year anniversary or (B) The fact that these guys are still some of my favorite skateboarders and filmmakers to date.


Legends We Love :: Mark Gonzales – Circle Board in Paris

Legends We Love :: Mark Gonzales - Circle Board in Paris

What’s one to do after pioneering street skateboarding for over 20 years? I know…You bolt 9 skateboards into perfect circle, buy a plane ticket to Paris, wait for the magic hour to strike and then you go and shoot one helluva beautiful video to show the rest of the world- Yeah this is what legends do. What’d you do today? Mark Gonzales We Love!!!


art we love :: mark gonzales – circle board in nyc

No doubt Mark Gonzales has changed the game. He along with being a well-esteemed skater, his art career has influenced more than a few young contemporaries. It seems like yesterday, but until I was reminded of the scene in Thomas Campbell’s “A Love Supreme”, I had forgotten about the “circle board.” A contraption made by Gonz, ridden here by Anthony Pappalardo, the circle board is of legend and seems to have even been up for art auction at one point. Don’t know if ever sold. Now, ESPN bloggers are calling him and his crew (Pappalardo and William Strobeck) the new Factory, or at least giving Gonz props for his influence on both skating as well as art (he collaborated early on with Spike Jonze and Harmony Korine). He also appears in Gummo, where he wrestles a chair. His influence is actually all around you, but good luck finding a VHS of his skate video Gnar Gnar. Still the circle board delights. Bravo.


artists we love :: mark gonzales – 10/16 – franklin parrasch gallery

artists we love :: mark gonzales - 10/16 - franklin parrasch gallery

Franklin Parrasch Gallery is pleased to present Round N’ Round – an exhibition which includes the premier of a new film and sculpture, as well as drawings, poems and correspondences by Mark Gonzales. Gonzales, who has been skateboarding professionally since he was a teenager is a prime mover in bringing the inherently improvisational, free-ranging attitude manifested in skateboarding’s engagement with the built and graphic environment to a wider audience. Gonzales’s work has been exhibited internationally, and his skating has been documented by Spike Jonze among other filmmakers.