nacional
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,734
๐๐ป 227
August 2007
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by nacional on Apr 6, 2011 15:53:15 GMT 1, Really really impressed, hefty price tags too!!!
Really really impressed, hefty price tags too!!!
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Yervi
Artist
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 429
๐๐ป 7
November 2010
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Yervi on Apr 6, 2011 17:58:33 GMT 1, anyone know if the knives are for sale and if so how much!
anyone know if the knives are for sale and if so how much!
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by des77 on Apr 6, 2011 18:07:36 GMT 1, Can anyone re upload the pdf ? cheers
Can someone do this ? They just sent reminders that work is for sale, so im sure the gallery wont mind it being posted
Can anyone re upload the pdf ? cheers Can someone do this ? They just sent reminders that work is for sale, so im sure the gallery wont mind it being posted
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by fingerz on Apr 6, 2011 18:13:42 GMT 1, last post on page 5 by notworthit
last post on page 5 by notworthit
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by des77 on Apr 6, 2011 18:14:50 GMT 1, last post on page 5 by notworthit
+1
last post on page 5 by notworthit +1
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by des77 on Apr 6, 2011 18:20:05 GMT 1, Very strange, looks like work from 3 different shows. The hollywood sign and Soldier helmet look like they are an idea from 2007 at Ocontemporary, the front end of the plane looks like something from a while back too.
Very strange, looks like work from 3 different shows. The hollywood sign and Soldier helmet look like they are an idea from 2007 at Ocontemporary, the front end of the plane looks like something from a while back too.
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skem
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 116
๐๐ป 0
October 2009
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by skem on Apr 6, 2011 19:22:02 GMT 1, Anybody going to this show and not a fan of the print? Thought I was going to be able to make it but can not now, if you are going to the show and can snag a print, I will be up next weekend for MOCA and can pay you cash, plus some beers.
Anybody going to this show and not a fan of the print? Thought I was going to be able to make it but can not now, if you are going to the show and can snag a print, I will be up next weekend for MOCA and can pay you cash, plus some beers.
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ecb
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 390
๐๐ป 0
October 2008
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by ecb on Apr 6, 2011 19:56:48 GMT 1, Any word on the price and run for the new D*FACE print? I want one, but cant afford 600+ for it. If its under 400, I'm all about it. That's just where I stand with my financial situation right now.
What should I expect this print to cost? Could someone give me a "ballpark" figure? This would be my first D*Face print. Thx all!!
Any word on the price and run for the new D*FACE print? I want one, but cant afford 600+ for it. If its under 400, I'm all about it. That's just where I stand with my financial situation right now.
What should I expect this print to cost? Could someone give me a "ballpark" figure? This would be my first D*Face print. Thx all!!
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fielder
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 646
๐๐ป 36
December 2008
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by fielder on Apr 6, 2011 20:04:37 GMT 1, edition of 75 available in person only $300
edition of 75 available in person only $300
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love
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,649
๐๐ป 391
October 2009
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by love on Apr 6, 2011 20:39:35 GMT 1, Good job D*
Good job D*
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by artcollector on Apr 6, 2011 21:09:30 GMT 1, Seeing that I queued for almost an eternity for the Apopcalypse Now show, I'm devastated that I'll not see this show in the flesh. Some things we have seen before but I say there are some amazing pieces. Want so much of it, an MJ the Butterdies the print is great too.
Seeing that I queued for almost an eternity for the Apopcalypse Now show, I'm devastated that I'll not see this show in the flesh. Some things we have seen before but I say there are some amazing pieces. Want so much of it, an MJ the Butterdies the print is great too.
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by artcollector on Apr 6, 2011 21:12:55 GMT 1, I won't be able to afford one on the secondary market either!
I won't be able to afford one on the secondary market either!
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Happy Shopper on Apr 7, 2011 10:46:19 GMT 1, The canvases are really dull, seen it before, but the second half of the PDF, the decks and books, look much more original.
The canvases are really dull, seen it before, but the second half of the PDF, the decks and books, look much more original.
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Daniel Silk on Apr 7, 2011 11:55:32 GMT 1, Lots of really great pieces
The skateboards The Hollywood Skull Pile all looks Brilliant!
Lots of really great pieces The skateboards The Hollywood Skull Pile all looks Brilliant!
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waveydavey
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 293
๐๐ป 24
July 2007
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by waveydavey on Apr 7, 2011 12:41:44 GMT 1, Knives, skulls & dead insects. It's all giving me the willies!!!!!!
All looks good and everyone who goes is in for a treat. Take lots of pictures to post for those who can't make it.
Knives, skulls & dead insects. It's all giving me the willies!!!!!!
All looks good and everyone who goes is in for a treat. Take lots of pictures to post for those who can't make it.
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Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Deleted on Apr 7, 2011 19:44:35 GMT 1, what time do you guys plan on showing up? Is 5 a good time?
what time do you guys plan on showing up? Is 5 a good time?
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by wizzy on Apr 7, 2011 19:45:57 GMT 1, No queues there now???.
No queues there now???.
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by senorflippyflop on Apr 8, 2011 1:57:14 GMT 1, i am going to try to make it. Not too sure if there is going to be a million peeps in line fawkit.
i am going to try to make it. Not too sure if there is going to be a million peeps in line fawkit.
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Passion Art
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,035
๐๐ป 319
April 2007
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Passion Art on Apr 8, 2011 2:41:43 GMT 1, I need the print! Someone please help. I asked a few pages back but got nothing. Happy to return the favor at some point in NYC.
I need the print! Someone please help. I asked a few pages back but got nothing. Happy to return the favor at some point in NYC.
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radarwax
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 37
๐๐ป 4
March 2007
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by radarwax on Apr 8, 2011 5:10:43 GMT 1, Heres an interview with LA Weekly I have not seen posted anywhere. I thought it was a great read. blogs.laweekly.com/stylecouncil/2011/04/dface_interview.php
D*Face Comes to L.A.: British Street Artist Talks Advertising, Skating and Punk Rock
Saturday night at Corey Helford Gallery in Culver City, "Going Nowhere Fast," the latest show from D*Face, will open. It is the British street artist's first solo show in Los Angeles. He had previously appeared in group shows at the well-known gallery, including the 2009 event "Clowns!" where we caught his American Express parody, "American Depressed."
Early this week, D*Face and his team were spotted outside of the Culver City gallery working on a mural on an outside wall that references Roy Lichtenstein and the artists who influenced him. We were able to get some facetime with the semi-anonymous artist to discuss his work.
A lot of your work seems to touch on the ideas of consumerism and advertising. Was there ever a point where you had a realization about the nature of advertising and consumerism? Yeah, I worked in advertising. I worked from the inside out. It was my escape from that world. It was design, illustration, and part of that was working with advertising brands and just seeing how those organizations are run and how you are manipulated in an unknown way most of the time. Even when you think you know, you're still being manipulated. I found it really interesting, I still find it really interesting today.
I like the idea of advertising being essentially the biggest vandals. They just display images. Nobody ever really has an agreement to that. Nobody really wants them to necessarily be there. There are a lot of parallels between that and street art. I like that concept, that there's one that is completely tolerated, but is really inappropriate in many ways, and the other being graffiti, which is very rarely tolerated, but an individual's craving release.
What I like to do is, I like to take what I call dead billboards, which are billboards that have either really old advertising on them or advertising that's been covered over-- they're just blank-- and then use my imagery to put them back up there, to offer people a different solution.
I'm not anti-brands in any way. I drink Coke and I wear Nike and I like those brands as what they are. What I don't like is blind faith, that that's the only solution, the only thing, and that's the only way. I just want people to question their environment and how much they surround themselves with and how much they have got and desire those things.
It's interesting that you mention that you aren't anti-brand. Street art does become a brand in a way, you have your name and certain styles you use. Everything becomes brand if you analyze it or break it down into its components. With graffiti, you're putting your name out there. You put your name up and you put your imagery up there and what you essentially want is more people to see it. You want more people to recognize what you do. In a very similar way, that's how advertising works, on a very basic level. it's easy to draw that comparison, but that comparison can be drawn to anything where you start to indirectly promote what you do and attach a name to it. The only way around it would be to change what you do every time you do it, which is pretty much impossible. Anyone who does that is commendable.
It's not an easy thing to do. No. By it's nature, I create what I like to create, things I find endearing. Therefore, I put them in a public space and that's what I started doing very early on just because I wanted to do it. It's a totally selfish act and it still is today. I produce what I want to see, what I like. If other people like it, that's a byproduct of my enjoyment and what I enjoy seeing. It's still a selfish act. So, to switch what I do every time would be impossible because I only have a limited amount of things that I like.
What was some of the first artwork that made an impression on you? Unknowingly, it was the early Thrasher magazines, from the early '80s and early '90s. For ten school years, I would say, I was getting Thrasher magazines passed down to me from other kids, and Thrasher Magazine in the UK was really quite hard to come by then in that era. When I would get that magazine, it was punk music, it was thrash metal. It was skateboarding, skateboard graphics, and that was what was inspiring me. Unknowingly, it was people like Jim Phillips, the album covers of the Dead Kennedys, things like that. I didn't really know the names or associate it, I was just like, "Who did that? Is it the bands that do their own artwork? Is it the skaters that do their own artwork?"
It was those things that I really found interesting, intriguing, as opposed to the galleries which my mom was taking me to. Oh, here's an amazing Turner. I don't relate to it. I could see it's merits. I could see how beautiful it is and how amazing it is to paint that piece, but I don't feel any emotional attachment to it. It was the skate graphics and the punk album covers that really inspired me.
You mentioned skate culture and punk rock. Was, specifically, Southern California punk rock inspiring to you? Yeah, it was really. I really wanted to come to California as a kid in London, gray, rainy London, where it had very few skate parks. I'd get Thrasher Magazine and, my geography was crap-- I failed geography-- so it's not surprising that I thought America was much smaller than it was and all of these skate parks were in California. I would look through Thrasher and think, California is amazing, there's a skatepark on every corner. So, I just wanted to go to California. That was pretty much my focus.
Honestly, that wasn't possible. My parents were broke, didn't have any money, and there was no way I was going to get over there. So, I lived it out through these magazines and skate videos like Wheels of Fire... I saw those videos and was like, I need to get out there and skate.
When did you finally get out to Southern California? Only recently, I guess, five years ago. It took a long time. I love it. The thing is, LA for me is all the irony of my work, but everything I love about where I would want to live. It's the sunshine, blue skies. People are friendly. I love it here. Equally, there's the flip of it, the infatuation with stardom. The whole place is bred upon this. Somebody wants to be a celebrity. You go into a shop for coffee and it's "Oh, hey, what are you doing? Are you an artist? Are you a musician?" and they're trying to find out what you do so that maybe it can maybe prosper with what they do or what they want to do. It's cool. They do it in a nice way, but the relentless drive can be soul destroying. I would imagine that if that was your drive being here with this beautiful sun and beautiful sky, it could be a really desolate place.
Approaching this show in LA, does anything about the landscape or architecture of it have anything to do with how you went about doing the show? It's big and bold and brassy. Everybody drives cars. It's not a walking society. My work is punchy and I want people to question that society. So doing things on a big scale, like this massive wall, obviously fits really well here, where you have to do things where people drive by in a car. They're not going to see the nuances of something very small because they just won't see it, whereas, in London, you can do that. You can do a much smaller, finely tuned piece of work in the street and it would get seen and people would dissect it, if you'd like. Here, I can't see that happening, so go bigger, go bolder and make those statements.
Do you have a memory of maybe the first time you heard feedback for what you're doing? I don't remember. When I first started doing stuff out on the street, I was unaware that anybody was paying attention to it. It really was a pure, selfish act, which was great, I didn't even know there was an audience for it.
It wasn't until about two years later that I met some people and they were like, "Oh, you did that?" and I was like, "Yeah" and they were "We see that everywhere. Is there more than one of you?"
I'm like, "No." Wherever I go, I put my work up and stickers led to big posters and then one thing became another.
That was probably the first time I heard any comments on my work. I thought that's kind of cool that people noticed it, I didn't really think about that. That feeds you to do more. If those people saw it, if I do it bigger, than more people will see it. If I do that part of London or travel to that city, those people will start seeing it. It becomes addictive.
To varying degrees, there's a certain sense of anonymity to street art. How important is anonymity for you? It's not so much important that you don't know who I am. I don't find that it's necessarily relevant that you know who I am regarding my work. The work speaks for itself and if it doesn't speak for itself, then I like people to reinterpret it for their own views. I don't know that knowing what I look like is relevant to what I do. I think people can be a little hung up on what the artist looks like. What are you doing? Are you looking at what they are doing or are you looking at them? Since I play that out in my work, it seems a little pointless to be like, "Hey, here I am. Am I cool? Do you think I'm cool? I'm not?"
I get kind of embarrassed about my work as well because you're putting your ass on the line. If you hear positive or negative, it will affect you. If I paint a piece for a gallery and I'm like, it was alright, I'm not 100% happy with it and you hear somebody say, "That's the best thing I've ever seen him do" then you're like, "Oh, really? Maybe I should do more of them. No, I didn't really enjoy it." You're going to have that internal dialog equally if you've done something that you feel is the best thing you've ever done and you hear someone go, "That's shit. I hate that. Why did you do that? It's terrible." You can't help but have that in your head already. The best thing to do is to avoid it. Don't listen. Listen to a very select few people whose opinion is rounded and who you value, who maybe have been around you for a while, so that you understand where they're coming from and that's pretty much it. I tend not to listen to what people say. That could be a dangerous thing equally.
It could be, but probably not. It's like anything. There are a lot of people who want to talk about it. There are a lot of people who have an opinion. You don't know who those people are so you don't know if you should value their opinion or not, especially with the Internet.
Follow @lizohanesian and @shannoncottrell on Twitter.
Heres an interview with LA Weekly I have not seen posted anywhere. I thought it was a great read. blogs.laweekly.com/stylecouncil/2011/04/dface_interview.phpD*Face Comes to L.A.: British Street Artist Talks Advertising, Skating and Punk Rock
Saturday night at Corey Helford Gallery in Culver City, "Going Nowhere Fast," the latest show from D*Face, will open. It is the British street artist's first solo show in Los Angeles. He had previously appeared in group shows at the well-known gallery, including the 2009 event "Clowns!" where we caught his American Express parody, "American Depressed." Early this week, D*Face and his team were spotted outside of the Culver City gallery working on a mural on an outside wall that references Roy Lichtenstein and the artists who influenced him. We were able to get some facetime with the semi-anonymous artist to discuss his work. A lot of your work seems to touch on the ideas of consumerism and advertising. Was there ever a point where you had a realization about the nature of advertising and consumerism?Yeah, I worked in advertising. I worked from the inside out. It was my escape from that world. It was design, illustration, and part of that was working with advertising brands and just seeing how those organizations are run and how you are manipulated in an unknown way most of the time. Even when you think you know, you're still being manipulated. I found it really interesting, I still find it really interesting today. I like the idea of advertising being essentially the biggest vandals. They just display images. Nobody ever really has an agreement to that. Nobody really wants them to necessarily be there. There are a lot of parallels between that and street art. I like that concept, that there's one that is completely tolerated, but is really inappropriate in many ways, and the other being graffiti, which is very rarely tolerated, but an individual's craving release. What I like to do is, I like to take what I call dead billboards, which are billboards that have either really old advertising on them or advertising that's been covered over-- they're just blank-- and then use my imagery to put them back up there, to offer people a different solution. I'm not anti-brands in any way. I drink Coke and I wear Nike and I like those brands as what they are. What I don't like is blind faith, that that's the only solution, the only thing, and that's the only way. I just want people to question their environment and how much they surround themselves with and how much they have got and desire those things. It's interesting that you mention that you aren't anti-brand. Street art does become a brand in a way, you have your name and certain styles you use.Everything becomes brand if you analyze it or break it down into its components. With graffiti, you're putting your name out there. You put your name up and you put your imagery up there and what you essentially want is more people to see it. You want more people to recognize what you do. In a very similar way, that's how advertising works, on a very basic level. it's easy to draw that comparison, but that comparison can be drawn to anything where you start to indirectly promote what you do and attach a name to it. The only way around it would be to change what you do every time you do it, which is pretty much impossible. Anyone who does that is commendable. It's not an easy thing to do.No. By it's nature, I create what I like to create, things I find endearing. Therefore, I put them in a public space and that's what I started doing very early on just because I wanted to do it. It's a totally selfish act and it still is today. I produce what I want to see, what I like. If other people like it, that's a byproduct of my enjoyment and what I enjoy seeing. It's still a selfish act. So, to switch what I do every time would be impossible because I only have a limited amount of things that I like. What was some of the first artwork that made an impression on you?Unknowingly, it was the early Thrasher magazines, from the early '80s and early '90s. For ten school years, I would say, I was getting Thrasher magazines passed down to me from other kids, and Thrasher Magazine in the UK was really quite hard to come by then in that era. When I would get that magazine, it was punk music, it was thrash metal. It was skateboarding, skateboard graphics, and that was what was inspiring me. Unknowingly, it was people like Jim Phillips, the album covers of the Dead Kennedys, things like that. I didn't really know the names or associate it, I was just like, "Who did that? Is it the bands that do their own artwork? Is it the skaters that do their own artwork?" It was those things that I really found interesting, intriguing, as opposed to the galleries which my mom was taking me to. Oh, here's an amazing Turner. I don't relate to it. I could see it's merits. I could see how beautiful it is and how amazing it is to paint that piece, but I don't feel any emotional attachment to it. It was the skate graphics and the punk album covers that really inspired me. You mentioned skate culture and punk rock. Was, specifically, Southern California punk rock inspiring to you?Yeah, it was really. I really wanted to come to California as a kid in London, gray, rainy London, where it had very few skate parks. I'd get Thrasher Magazine and, my geography was crap-- I failed geography-- so it's not surprising that I thought America was much smaller than it was and all of these skate parks were in California. I would look through Thrasher and think, California is amazing, there's a skatepark on every corner. So, I just wanted to go to California. That was pretty much my focus. Honestly, that wasn't possible. My parents were broke, didn't have any money, and there was no way I was going to get over there. So, I lived it out through these magazines and skate videos like Wheels of Fire... I saw those videos and was like, I need to get out there and skate. When did you finally get out to Southern California? Only recently, I guess, five years ago. It took a long time. I love it. The thing is, LA for me is all the irony of my work, but everything I love about where I would want to live. It's the sunshine, blue skies. People are friendly. I love it here. Equally, there's the flip of it, the infatuation with stardom. The whole place is bred upon this. Somebody wants to be a celebrity. You go into a shop for coffee and it's "Oh, hey, what are you doing? Are you an artist? Are you a musician?" and they're trying to find out what you do so that maybe it can maybe prosper with what they do or what they want to do. It's cool. They do it in a nice way, but the relentless drive can be soul destroying. I would imagine that if that was your drive being here with this beautiful sun and beautiful sky, it could be a really desolate place. Approaching this show in LA, does anything about the landscape or architecture of it have anything to do with how you went about doing the show? It's big and bold and brassy. Everybody drives cars. It's not a walking society. My work is punchy and I want people to question that society. So doing things on a big scale, like this massive wall, obviously fits really well here, where you have to do things where people drive by in a car. They're not going to see the nuances of something very small because they just won't see it, whereas, in London, you can do that. You can do a much smaller, finely tuned piece of work in the street and it would get seen and people would dissect it, if you'd like. Here, I can't see that happening, so go bigger, go bolder and make those statements. Do you have a memory of maybe the first time you heard feedback for what you're doing?I don't remember. When I first started doing stuff out on the street, I was unaware that anybody was paying attention to it. It really was a pure, selfish act, which was great, I didn't even know there was an audience for it. It wasn't until about two years later that I met some people and they were like, "Oh, you did that?" and I was like, "Yeah" and they were "We see that everywhere. Is there more than one of you?" I'm like, "No." Wherever I go, I put my work up and stickers led to big posters and then one thing became another. That was probably the first time I heard any comments on my work. I thought that's kind of cool that people noticed it, I didn't really think about that. That feeds you to do more. If those people saw it, if I do it bigger, than more people will see it. If I do that part of London or travel to that city, those people will start seeing it. It becomes addictive. To varying degrees, there's a certain sense of anonymity to street art. How important is anonymity for you? It's not so much important that you don't know who I am. I don't find that it's necessarily relevant that you know who I am regarding my work. The work speaks for itself and if it doesn't speak for itself, then I like people to reinterpret it for their own views. I don't know that knowing what I look like is relevant to what I do. I think people can be a little hung up on what the artist looks like. What are you doing? Are you looking at what they are doing or are you looking at them? Since I play that out in my work, it seems a little pointless to be like, "Hey, here I am. Am I cool? Do you think I'm cool? I'm not?" I get kind of embarrassed about my work as well because you're putting your ass on the line. If you hear positive or negative, it will affect you. If I paint a piece for a gallery and I'm like, it was alright, I'm not 100% happy with it and you hear somebody say, "That's the best thing I've ever seen him do" then you're like, "Oh, really? Maybe I should do more of them. No, I didn't really enjoy it." You're going to have that internal dialog equally if you've done something that you feel is the best thing you've ever done and you hear someone go, "That's shit. I hate that. Why did you do that? It's terrible." You can't help but have that in your head already. The best thing to do is to avoid it. Don't listen. Listen to a very select few people whose opinion is rounded and who you value, who maybe have been around you for a while, so that you understand where they're coming from and that's pretty much it. I tend not to listen to what people say. That could be a dangerous thing equally. It could be, but probably not.It's like anything. There are a lot of people who want to talk about it. There are a lot of people who have an opinion. You don't know who those people are so you don't know if you should value their opinion or not, especially with the Internet. Follow @lizohanesian and @shannoncottrell on Twitter.
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Brushstrokes 75 on Apr 8, 2011 14:18:41 GMT 1, The MJ are dope but I reckon they will sell fast (too fast unfortunately).
Like the print as well. Will try to find one on the secondary market if they don't fly high!
The MJ are dope but I reckon they will sell fast (too fast unfortunately).
Like the print as well. Will try to find one on the secondary market if they don't fly high!
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jackcuzzy
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 730
๐๐ป 101
August 2009
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by jackcuzzy on Apr 8, 2011 14:44:58 GMT 1, Has anyone got a picture of the actual print? Not just the image from the canvas?
Still wondering if I should pick one up or not.
Has anyone got a picture of the actual print? Not just the image from the canvas?
Still wondering if I should pick one up or not.
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stenev
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 560
๐๐ป 36
December 2009
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by stenev on Apr 8, 2011 15:14:48 GMT 1, I really like this:
Wonder how long it will last
source:
twitter.com/#!/GoodTimesMedia/status/56324555211415553
I really like this: Wonder how long it will last source: twitter.com/#!/GoodTimesMedia/status/56324555211415553
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Karl Read
Artist
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 3,569
๐๐ป 637
April 2008
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Karl Read on Apr 8, 2011 15:52:49 GMT 1, I really like this: Wonder how long it will last source: twitter.com/#!/GoodTimesMedia/status/56324555211415553
Genius!
I really like this: Wonder how long it will last source: twitter.com/#!/GoodTimesMedia/status/56324555211415553 Genius!
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jackcuzzy
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 730
๐๐ป 101
August 2009
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by jackcuzzy on Apr 8, 2011 16:30:08 GMT 1, Amazing! That should get him recognised a bit more!
Amazing! That should get him recognised a bit more!
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by sand on Apr 8, 2011 16:39:59 GMT 1, Yawn.
How come D* only hits the streets when he's looking to promote his latest show opening and get a bit of media attention?
Yawn.
How come D* only hits the streets when he's looking to promote his latest show opening and get a bit of media attention?
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ashby
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February 2008
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by bazzj04 on Apr 8, 2011 16:56:07 GMT 1, Yawn. How come D* only hits the streets when he's looking to promote his latest show opening and get a bit of media attention?
think you answered your own question there
Yawn. How come D* only hits the streets when he's looking to promote his latest show opening and get a bit of media attention? think you answered your own question there
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geoffw
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by geoffw on Apr 8, 2011 16:59:48 GMT 1, Yep....it's called PR. Much like Banksy's suddne trip to LA at Oscar time...
Yep....it's called PR. Much like Banksy's suddne trip to LA at Oscar time...
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Ruggs
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DFace "Going Nowhere Fast" Corey Helford, 9th Apr, by Ruggs on Apr 8, 2011 17:09:09 GMT 1, Yep....it's called PR. Much like Banksy's suddne trip to LA at Oscar time...
Just gonna say that.
Yep....it's called PR. Much like Banksy's suddne trip to LA at Oscar time... Just gonna say that.
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