PCP artist David Weidman at The Vintage Collective in Long Beach, CA.
DATE: March 26, 2011 (6-9 p.m.)
LOCATION: 2122 E. 4th St., Long Beach, CA 90814
Tags: David Weidman, poster child prints, the vintage collection
March 21, 2011 – 10:04 AM
PCP artist David Weidman at The Vintage Collective in Long Beach, CA.
DATE: March 26, 2011 (6-9 p.m.)
LOCATION: 2122 E. 4th St., Long Beach, CA 90814
Tags: David Weidman, poster child prints, the vintage collection
March 18, 2011 – 12:03 AM
PCP artist, Adam Wallacavage gears up for his first solo show in LA this weekend!
Via Arrested Motion…
March 11, 2011 – 3:12 PM
From Juxtapoz
Next week, we will premiere our new video profile, Juxtapoz Presents: Curtis Kulig, but today, we have a studio visit with the NYC-based street, photography, and fine artist. You may recognize that “Love Me” sticker from the intro of “Saturday Night Live.”
Kulig’s website has an extensive portfolio of his photographs, but we mostly focus on his “Love Me” tags and stickers in both this post and in our profile. We don’t know about you, but the last time we were in NYC, we saw that “Love Me” sticker everywhere. A nice spin on the “I Heart NY” t-shirt.

Stay tuned for Alexander Klein’s Juxtapoz Presents: Curtis Kulig next week.
Tags: Curtis Kulig, juxtapiz, LOVE ME
March 8, 2011 – 10:21 AM
Art, Access & Decay: New York 1975 – 1985
CURATED BY PETER FRANK & LISA KAHANE
APRIL 2 – APRIL 30, 2011
Opening Reception: SATURDAY, APRIL 2ND, 8-11PM (Valet Parking Provided)
Art, Access & Decay: New York 1975-1985, examines a new art movement that emerged in New York at this time, uninfluenced by commercial or academic input. This new movement wanted to avoid the elite confines set by the art market, and made little compromise. These artists wanted to produce artwork nobody had seen before but everybody could understand. They presented this artwork on the streets, in makeshift storefronts, and on public access television to ensure that it was widely available, as broadly cast and as affordable as possible.
Art, Access & Decay draws mostly from three overlapping phenomena: an artists’ collective called Collaborative Projects, or CoLab; Fashion Moda, a cultural center situated in the South Bronx, (then one of the most devastated neighborhoods in the country); and a corner of Manhattan, the East Village, that emerged as an alternative to SoHo’s increasingly upscale art scene. These phenomena emerged around 1980, but the spirit that engendered them was rampant by the mid-1970s. Do-it-yourself and guerrilla approaches to exhibitions and performances proliferated. The streets, whether in the financial district, Chinatown, Harlem or Times Square, were as legitimate an arena for art making and exhibiting as anywhere else. This mindset stuck well into the 1980s, as high art and commercial music began appropriating the look and energy of graffiti and hand-drawn posters, Xeroxed flyers and eccentric installations. The appropriation, however, merely skimmed the surface of the look and verve of this new artistic expression.
By the early 1980s, uptown and downtown audiences, the art market and art theorists alike, all began embracing street art. The embrace was mutual, but not automatic. The artists of New York’s new vernacular craved the acceptance of the art world and the public at large, but not at the expense of their street sensibility.
Participating Artists include John Ahearn, Liza Bear, Andrea Callard, Thom Corn, CRASH, Jody Culkin, DAZE, Jane Dickson, Stefan Eins, Coleen Fitzgibbon, Mike Glier, Robert Goldman, Ilona Granet, Keith Haring, Julie Harrison, Jenny Holzer, GH Hovagimyan, Becky Howland, Lisa Kahane, Christof Kohlhofer, KOOR, Joe Lewis, Michael McClard, Ann Messner, Richard Miller, Joseph Nechvatal, Tom Otterness, Cara Perlman, Virge Piersol, Walter Robinson, Judy Ross, Christy Rupp, Teri Slotkin, David Wojnarowicz, Martin Wong.
Tags: 1975, 1985, Access & Decay, Andrea Callard, Ann Messner, april 2, Art, Becky Howland, Cara Perlman, Christof Kohlhofer, Christy Rupp, Coleen Fitzgibbon, CRASH, David Wojnarowicz, DAZE, GH Hovagimyan, Ilona Granet, Jane Dickson, Jenny Holzer, Jody Culkin, Joe Lewis, John Ahearn, Joseph Nechvatal, Judy Ross, Julie Harrison, Keith Haring, KOOR, Lisa Kahane, Liza Bear, Los Angeles, Martin Wong, Michael McClard, Mike Glier, New York, Richard Miller, Robert Goldman, sheprard fairey, Stefan Eins, Subliminal Projects, Teri Slotkin, Thom Corn, Tom Otterness, Virge Piersol, Walter Robinson