Shepard Fairey (OBEY)
Cut it up Do it yourself
2017
Screen printing
61 × 45.5 cm
Ed. 520/550
Location: Paris, France
Documents
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Invoice or proof of purchase
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About the artwork
This work features Shepard Fairey's iconic figure cut into four parts and colored in black and red. Evoking an X-ray, each part is marked by a cutter blade, placed in the center of each division. Shepard Fairey designed this print by cutting out his stencils and assembling them, using a technique he likens to computer cut-and-paste. As with his artistic commitment, he is quick to criticize computer tools as too safe and sterile, preferring to value human imperfections in his artistic process.
Expert opinion
While Shepard Fairey is celebrated around the world for his plural struggles and committed work, he is also known for his iconic Obey Icon Face, which he reinterprets here.
About the artist
American artist, born in 1970. Lives and works in Los Angeles (USA). Muralist, illustrator and silkscreen artist, Shepard Fairey (Obey) is one of the most influential figures in urban art. Influenced by Andy Warhol, Barbara Kruger and Diego Rivera, he is best known for the HOPE portrait of Barack Obama he created for his presidential campaign in 2008, which has since been acquired by the National Portrait Gallery (Washington, USA). Following the attacks in France on November 13, 2015, Shepard Fairey created a Marianne with the motto "Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité", a work that has now become a national symbol and is on display at the Élysée Palace. In 2019, he will create his hundredth fresco at Place Igor Stravinsky in Paris, next to the Centre Pompidou. Internationally renowned, Shepard Fairey can be found in the collections of the Smithsonian (Washington, USA), the Museum of Modern Art (New York, USA) and the Victoria and Albert Museum (London, UK). He has also exhibited in prestigious venues such as the Fondation Cartier for the "Né dans la rue - Graffiti" exhibition in 2009, and the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston (USA), where his retrospective "Supply & Demand" was organized in 2009.
“Cut it Up - Do it Yourself is an iteration of my Obey Icon Face inspired by my habit of using an X-acto knife to create drawings, make collages, cut out spray paint stencils and cut out illustrations from Rubylith (a graphic art and screen printing film).”
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