Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Mar 23, 2023 23:58:00 GMT 1, Taking The Piss Too 2023
8in x 12in single layer spray painted stencil on canvas -signed and dated $150 + shipping
If you are interested in buying one please reach out or click on the link in the footer below!
Taking The Piss Too 2023 8in x 12in single layer spray painted stencil on canvas -signed and dated $150 + shipping If you are interested in buying one please reach out or click on the link in the footer below!
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy Stamps release @ Ukraine, by Whitefish on Mar 16, 2023 10:12:50 GMT 1, The hoodies are cool! That looks fantastic! Is it in your possession? The website photo (that I couldn't magnify) doesn't do it justice. Yes, it was delivered today.
No email, no tracking, signature was required via USPS
This is the backside.
The hoodies are cool! That looks fantastic! Is it in your possession? The website photo (that I couldn't magnify) doesn't do it justice. Yes, it was delivered today. No email, no tracking, signature was required via USPS This is the backside.
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy Stamps release @ Ukraine, by Whitefish on Mar 16, 2023 3:31:53 GMT 1, The hoodies are cool!
The hoodies are cool!
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Cool Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Feb 15, 2023 20:28:55 GMT 1, Next up…
Alter Ego by PEZ 2017 SOLD
Signed and numbered edition of 150
Stored flat, excellent condition and has never been framed. I am the original owner.
25x34inch 22 color screenprint on 300gsm Somerset deckled edge paper
Next up… Alter Ego by PEZ 2017 SOLD Signed and numbered edition of 150 Stored flat, excellent condition and has never been framed. I am the original owner. 25x34inch 22 color screenprint on 300gsm Somerset deckled edge paper
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Feb 7, 2023 15:30:38 GMT 1, Here is a little sketchbook drawing to kick off 2023
http://instagr.am/p/CoVe2fnuQlG
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Jan 19, 2023 0:17:11 GMT 1, 'Limbic Resonance' diptych on canvas
'Limbic Resonance' diptych on canvas
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Oliwia Dabrowska is the SYMBOL OF HOPE 2022, by Whitefish on Jan 14, 2023 0:30:14 GMT 1, Hope is in Progress
http://instagram.com/p/CnXmhbvJHbG
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Dec 25, 2022 22:10:21 GMT 1, Murry Christmas
http://instagram.com/p/CmmupG9Jjqb
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Oliwia Dabrowska is the SYMBOL OF HOPE 2022, by Whitefish on Nov 30, 2022 17:49:54 GMT 1,
At 3½ years old, Oliwia Dabrowska only needed a single scene to inspire hope, embody despair and forever vault herself into cinematic history. Twenty-nine years later, she’s taking inspiration from her role as “the girl in the red coat” from “Schindler’s List,” Steven Spielberg’s 1993 film about the Holocaust, aiming once again to show that war devastates even the innocent — this time, through raising money and volunteering to help Ukrainian refugees.
“I thought that, because of this symbol, I could speak to more people, I could involve more people — people who don’t know me as me, but they know I played this little girl in the red coat,” she told The Washington Post from her home in Krakow, Poland.
The movie about Nazi businessman Oskar Schindler, who secretly saved some 1,200 Jews by employing them in his factory, was shot almost entirely in black-and-white. One exception: As Schindler watches atop a hill while Nazis liquidate the Krakow Ghetto, a girl in red stands out amid the monochrome grayscale, seemingly unnoticed and unbothered as she ambles through the horrific violence erupting all around her.
Dabrowska never expected war to break out, so Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine stunned her into inaction for three or four days. When she emerged from the fog, fear followed, she said, until a conversation with a friend in the United States steeled her and gave her courage.
“I decided to change my fear into action, into helping people,” she told The Post.
Dabrowska asked her mother, who unlike Dabrowska has a car and a driver’s license, whether she would go with her to volunteer at the Ukrainian border roughly 130 miles from Krakow. She agreed.
There, they spent weeks ferrying about 100 refugees — mostly families — from the border to various Polish cities. The United Nations estimates that more than 2.8 million Ukrainians have so far sought safe haven in Poland. (Over 5 million have fled in total, according to the U.N.)
Their work meant not only driving refugees from the border to the interior of Poland, but also connecting them with Polish citizens willing to take them in, Dabrowska said. Early in the invasion before the government had created a system to handle refugees, Dabrowska checked many of the Facebook groups she follows for people offering housing.
Ukrainians had swarmed the border, resulting in a three- or four-day wait to cross into Poland, Dabrowska said. But, she added, it wasn’t chaotic or even loud. Thousands of people, exhausted and heartbroken, quietly waited their turn to escape their war-torn homeland. One of them stood out: a boy who, so exhausted from traveling and waiting, started vomiting. He barely reacted.
“He was very quiet, and his eyes were so big and lost,” Dabrowska said. “Every child there has big lost eyes.”
She thought of her 3½-year-old self, or rather, the character she played.
“There were and still are a lot of children,” Dabrowska said, “and I saw this little girl in the red coat in every child.”
Helping displaced people has often meant reacting to unforeseeable situations, like when she learned of an insulin shortage, which led her to connect a donor wanting to help diabetic refugees with a fellow volunteer who is a pharmacist. In one case, Dabrowska took in an 18-year-old mother and her son as she sought a more permanent place for them. In another, she traveled to Lviv, in western Ukraine, to pick up a dog that had been left behind earlier in the war. Another volunteer fostered the pet until they could take it to its owner in Berlin.
“I remember every single person, every single story. And all of those stories are very, very tragic and horrible,” Dabrowska told The Post, “and I don’t think I will forget them in my life — ever.”
Over the past couple of weeks, Dabrowska’s role has shifted. While she still occasionally transports Ukrainians, she more often delivers aid packages to the border, handles logistics and raises money for the two organizations she volunteers for. It’s not as compelling as shepherding refugees to safety, but she said it’s important for her to embrace the unique opportunity of being the “girl in the red coat” — a platform only she can use to drum up cash to help those fleeing war with virtually nothing.
Before the invasion, Dabrowska was a self-employed copywriter. She still squeezes in jobs for clients because she doesn’t want to lose them. But that work has taken a back seat to her wartime volunteerism. She’ll keep up with the aid work for the foreseeable future, she said. Even if the war ends tomorrow, millions of Ukrainians will need homes, jobs, and schools for their children.
“There is no more important thing than helping refugees,” Dabrowska said. “This is my biggest purpose now.”
When the war started, “Schindler’s List” didn’t spring to mind, Dabrowska said. Other than the occasional journalist calling on significant anniversaries of the film’s release, it hasn’t affected her daily life much — she’s “just a normal person with a regular life.” In 2013, the 20th anniversary of the film’s release, she told the Guardian she was “horrified” when she watched the film as an 11-year-old and regretted not heeding Spielberg’s advice to wait until she was an adult and could “grow up into the film.”
“I was ashamed of being in the movie and really angry with my mother and father when they told anyone about my part,” she told the newspaper. But when she re-watched it at 18, she had a change of heart: “I had been part of something I could be proud of.”
A couple of weeks into the war, her friend Adam Babb created an artistic adaptation of a still image from the movie — Dabrowska’s 3½-year-old self draped in her famous coat. Except in Babb’s version, it is no longer red but dappled in the blue of the Ukrainian flag. Behind her, Polish Jews look to her as Nazis corral and guard them.
Dabrowska leaned into the connection, writing a caption for her friend’s artwork.
“She was always the symbol of hope. Let her be it again.”
The little girl shows up once more in “Schindler’s List” as the title character talks with the Nazi SS officer charged with exhuming and burning the bodies of those murdered during the ghetto liquidation. As carts filled with bodies roll toward a mass pyre, Schindler spots the girl among the dead. Again, the red of her coat is the only color in an otherwise black-and-white scene.
Dabrowska said she feels a strong connection to that girl, that it wasn’t just a role and that she’s not just a character on a screen. The connection remains, one that allows her to tap into what the girl symbolizes: the power for change, innocence and hope — hope that injustice can inspire even powerful insiders like Schindler to do good. Those are all things she wants to make real for Ukrainian refugees.
“She died in the movie,” Dabrowska said, “but she lives within me.”
At 3½ years old, Oliwia Dabrowska only needed a single scene to inspire hope, embody despair and forever vault herself into cinematic history. Twenty-nine years later, she’s taking inspiration from her role as “the girl in the red coat” from “Schindler’s List,” Steven Spielberg’s 1993 film about the Holocaust, aiming once again to show that war devastates even the innocent — this time, through raising money and volunteering to help Ukrainian refugees. “I thought that, because of this symbol, I could speak to more people, I could involve more people — people who don’t know me as me, but they know I played this little girl in the red coat,” she told The Washington Post from her home in Krakow, Poland. The movie about Nazi businessman Oskar Schindler, who secretly saved some 1,200 Jews by employing them in his factory, was shot almost entirely in black-and-white. One exception: As Schindler watches atop a hill while Nazis liquidate the Krakow Ghetto, a girl in red stands out amid the monochrome grayscale, seemingly unnoticed and unbothered as she ambles through the horrific violence erupting all around her. Dabrowska never expected war to break out, so Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine stunned her into inaction for three or four days. When she emerged from the fog, fear followed, she said, until a conversation with a friend in the United States steeled her and gave her courage. “I decided to change my fear into action, into helping people,” she told The Post. Dabrowska asked her mother, who unlike Dabrowska has a car and a driver’s license, whether she would go with her to volunteer at the Ukrainian border roughly 130 miles from Krakow. She agreed. There, they spent weeks ferrying about 100 refugees — mostly families — from the border to various Polish cities. The United Nations estimates that more than 2.8 million Ukrainians have so far sought safe haven in Poland. (Over 5 million have fled in total, according to the U.N.) Their work meant not only driving refugees from the border to the interior of Poland, but also connecting them with Polish citizens willing to take them in, Dabrowska said. Early in the invasion before the government had created a system to handle refugees, Dabrowska checked many of the Facebook groups she follows for people offering housing. Ukrainians had swarmed the border, resulting in a three- or four-day wait to cross into Poland, Dabrowska said. But, she added, it wasn’t chaotic or even loud. Thousands of people, exhausted and heartbroken, quietly waited their turn to escape their war-torn homeland. One of them stood out: a boy who, so exhausted from traveling and waiting, started vomiting. He barely reacted. “He was very quiet, and his eyes were so big and lost,” Dabrowska said. “Every child there has big lost eyes.” She thought of her 3½-year-old self, or rather, the character she played. “There were and still are a lot of children,” Dabrowska said, “and I saw this little girl in the red coat in every child.” Helping displaced people has often meant reacting to unforeseeable situations, like when she learned of an insulin shortage, which led her to connect a donor wanting to help diabetic refugees with a fellow volunteer who is a pharmacist. In one case, Dabrowska took in an 18-year-old mother and her son as she sought a more permanent place for them. In another, she traveled to Lviv, in western Ukraine, to pick up a dog that had been left behind earlier in the war. Another volunteer fostered the pet until they could take it to its owner in Berlin. “I remember every single person, every single story. And all of those stories are very, very tragic and horrible,” Dabrowska told The Post, “and I don’t think I will forget them in my life — ever.” Over the past couple of weeks, Dabrowska’s role has shifted. While she still occasionally transports Ukrainians, she more often delivers aid packages to the border, handles logistics and raises money for the two organizations she volunteers for. It’s not as compelling as shepherding refugees to safety, but she said it’s important for her to embrace the unique opportunity of being the “girl in the red coat” — a platform only she can use to drum up cash to help those fleeing war with virtually nothing. Before the invasion, Dabrowska was a self-employed copywriter. She still squeezes in jobs for clients because she doesn’t want to lose them. But that work has taken a back seat to her wartime volunteerism. She’ll keep up with the aid work for the foreseeable future, she said. Even if the war ends tomorrow, millions of Ukrainians will need homes, jobs, and schools for their children. “There is no more important thing than helping refugees,” Dabrowska said. “This is my biggest purpose now.” When the war started, “Schindler’s List” didn’t spring to mind, Dabrowska said. Other than the occasional journalist calling on significant anniversaries of the film’s release, it hasn’t affected her daily life much — she’s “just a normal person with a regular life.” In 2013, the 20th anniversary of the film’s release, she told the Guardian she was “horrified” when she watched the film as an 11-year-old and regretted not heeding Spielberg’s advice to wait until she was an adult and could “grow up into the film.” “I was ashamed of being in the movie and really angry with my mother and father when they told anyone about my part,” she told the newspaper. But when she re-watched it at 18, she had a change of heart: “I had been part of something I could be proud of.” A couple of weeks into the war, her friend Adam Babb created an artistic adaptation of a still image from the movie — Dabrowska’s 3½-year-old self draped in her famous coat. Except in Babb’s version, it is no longer red but dappled in the blue of the Ukrainian flag. Behind her, Polish Jews look to her as Nazis corral and guard them. Dabrowska leaned into the connection, writing a caption for her friend’s artwork. “She was always the symbol of hope. Let her be it again.” The little girl shows up once more in “Schindler’s List” as the title character talks with the Nazi SS officer charged with exhuming and burning the bodies of those murdered during the ghetto liquidation. As carts filled with bodies roll toward a mass pyre, Schindler spots the girl among the dead. Again, the red of her coat is the only color in an otherwise black-and-white scene. Dabrowska said she feels a strong connection to that girl, that it wasn’t just a role and that she’s not just a character on a screen. The connection remains, one that allows her to tap into what the girl symbolizes: the power for change, innocence and hope — hope that injustice can inspire even powerful insiders like Schindler to do good. Those are all things she wants to make real for Ukrainian refugees. “She died in the movie,” Dabrowska said, “but she lives within me.”
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy Raffle • Dismaland Refugee Boat, by Whitefish on Nov 14, 2022 12:53:26 GMT 1, Dream Boat by @banksy (2015)
Dimensions : 90 × 38 × 42 cm [Mixed media with hand painted sculptures]
☑️With Full Pest Control Certification
This masterpiece is available for the very first time with a significant portion of proceeds going to Chooselove
The Ballon Rouge and S16 Gallery is proud to offer this exceptional piece as part of its Context Miami collection. 🔴
Originally shown at the Dismaland exhibition, then raffled for charity by Banksy.
http://instagram.com/p/CkbK_7RDzaU
Dream Boat by @banksy (2015) Dimensions : 90 × 38 × 42 cm [Mixed media with hand painted sculptures] ☑️With Full Pest Control Certification This masterpiece is available for the very first time with a significant portion of proceeds going to Chooselove The Ballon Rouge and S16 Gallery is proud to offer this exceptional piece as part of its Context Miami collection. 🔴 Originally shown at the Dismaland exhibition, then raffled for charity by Banksy. http://instagram.com/p/CkbK_7RDzaU
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Nov 7, 2022 17:35:54 GMT 1, "Taking The Piss Too" - 2022 -
W H i T E F i S H
http://instagram.com/p/CkqnG0XpgfP
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Nov 6, 2022 20:45:49 GMT 1, I was able to bang out a few canvas this weekend.
Stay Up
http://instagr.am/p/CkoY9kbgIlh
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy funds Refugee Rescue boat, by Whitefish on Oct 14, 2022 19:43:49 GMT 1, Getting some well deserved TLC
W w w W
W W
W w w W
Getting some well deserved TLC W w w W W W W w w W
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy funds Refugee Rescue boat, by Whitefish on Oct 13, 2022 17:19:22 GMT 1, http://instagr.am/p/CjqG7fWDL8d
"The LouiseMichel is back in Spain for maintenance work. We left the CentralMed once again full of rage & anger at the system that’s driven by economics, nationalism and racism, and that is intentionally letting people risk their lives and drown every day. This must stop!"
MV Louise Michel crew
http://instagr.am/p/CjqG7fWDL8d "The LouiseMichel is back in Spain for maintenance work. We left the CentralMed once again full of rage & anger at the system that’s driven by economics, nationalism and racism, and that is intentionally letting people risk their lives and drown every day. This must stop!" MV Louise Michel crew
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Oliwia Dabrowska is the SYMBOL OF HOPE 2022, by Whitefish on Oct 12, 2022 17:42:16 GMT 1, Hope 2022
Release Date TBD
Signed and Numbered
Please stay tuned for more details!!!
http://instagr.am/p/Cjm-rUxLUeP
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy funds Refugee Rescue boat, by Whitefish on Sept 30, 2022 23:31:34 GMT 1, 68 of the 88 refugees that were saved from drowning at sea were unaccompanied minors... They have been on board the MV LouiseMichel for over 24hrs and are in desperate need of safe port.
PLEASE spread the word any way you can...
http://instagram.com/p/CjJWVb-pjDB
68 of the 88 refugees that were saved from drowning at sea were unaccompanied minors... They have been on board the MV LouiseMichel for over 24hrs and are in desperate need of safe port. PLEASE spread the word any way you can... http://instagram.com/p/CjJWVb-pjDB
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy funds Refugee Rescue boat, by Whitefish on Sept 29, 2022 16:56:05 GMT 1,
88 people rescued from rubber boat. Early this morning MV Louise Michel was informed about many people in distress. After several hours of search and a difficult rescue, due to the fast approach of a vessel from so called Libyan coast guard, everyone is now on board.
88 people rescued from rubber boat. Early this morning MV Louise Michel was informed about many people in distress. After several hours of search and a difficult rescue, due to the fast approach of a vessel from so called Libyan coast guard, everyone is now on board.
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Cool Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Sept 21, 2022 18:57:49 GMT 1, SCROLL TO THE BOTTOM FOR LATEST SALE!
For your consideration...
I am selling my David Choe Obama Hope 2 screen print. It is signed and numbered from an edition of 200. This screen print was released in 2008 and measures 18 inches by 24 inches. The piece is in excellent condition, has never been framed and had been stored flat. World wide shipping is available from the USA.
As we all know these are very hard to come by and will no doubt rise value. This is your chance to own a piece of history by an extremely talented artist.
My asking price is $2500 or nearest offer. SOLD
Thank You
SCROLL TO THE BOTTOM FOR LATEST SALE!
For your consideration...
I am selling my David Choe Obama Hope 2 screen print. It is signed and numbered from an edition of 200. This screen print was released in 2008 and measures 18 inches by 24 inches. The piece is in excellent condition, has never been framed and had been stored flat. World wide shipping is available from the USA.
As we all know these are very hard to come by and will no doubt rise value. This is your chance to own a piece of history by an extremely talented artist.
My asking price is $2500 or nearest offer. SOLD
Thank You
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Beyond The Streets 2022, by Whitefish on Sept 15, 2022 10:14:30 GMT 1, control.gallery/password
B B B B B B
B B B B
B B
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Sept 4, 2022 16:52:58 GMT 1, 'Together We Can Do Anything' 2022
http://instagr.am/p/CiFwWyUuYvM
B B B
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Whitefish 🇺🇸 Painting • Show News • Art For Sale, by Whitefish on Sept 3, 2022 22:35:42 GMT 1, 'Iodine Rainbow' 2022 Acrylic painting on stretched canvas, signed on verso
http://instagr.am/p/CiDxGzaJ_Im
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Palindrome by WHITEFiSH, by Whitefish on Sept 1, 2022 23:32:00 GMT 1, Dusting off the paint brushes, turn up the sound!
Dusting off the paint brushes, turn up the sound!
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Beyond The Streets 2022, by Whitefish on Aug 31, 2022 20:37:36 GMT 1, Beyond The Streets is returning to Los Angeles!
Don't miss the grand opening on Saturday the 24th 2022 from 11am-6pm.
A note from the founder, Roger Gastman:
"The last few years have been such an amazing ride. I’m continually thankful for this community and all the amazing people who have supported BEYOND THE STREETS. Together, with my team and the unwavering support of so many, we have been able to create more than I had ever imagined. It’s time to bring it home. The next chapter of our story is the launch of the BEYOND THE STREETS LOS ANGELES Flagship. This place is not going away in a few months. We are here to stay."
The BEYOND THE STREETS Los Angeles Flagship will house two permanent galleries, a retail store, brand activations, community events and more. This space will capture the spirit of our past shows in an intimate setting available to our fans year-round, (no tickets needed). Shows will rotate roughly every six weeks, allowing us to cast a spotlight on a handful of artists, both established and emerging. We have so much in store for our amazing fans and followers, including major international announcements, exclusive product drops, and more. We couldn't have done it without you, Los Angeles, and we're so happy to be home.
434 N La Brea Ave Los Angeles, CA 90036
Beyond The Streets is returning to Los Angeles!
Don't miss the grand opening on Saturday the 24th 2022 from 11am-6pm.
A note from the founder, Roger Gastman:
"The last few years have been such an amazing ride. I’m continually thankful for this community and all the amazing people who have supported BEYOND THE STREETS. Together, with my team and the unwavering support of so many, we have been able to create more than I had ever imagined. It’s time to bring it home. The next chapter of our story is the launch of the BEYOND THE STREETS LOS ANGELES Flagship. This place is not going away in a few months. We are here to stay."
The BEYOND THE STREETS Los Angeles Flagship will house two permanent galleries, a retail store, brand activations, community events and more. This space will capture the spirit of our past shows in an intimate setting available to our fans year-round, (no tickets needed). Shows will rotate roughly every six weeks, allowing us to cast a spotlight on a handful of artists, both established and emerging. We have so much in store for our amazing fans and followers, including major international announcements, exclusive product drops, and more. We couldn't have done it without you, Los Angeles, and we're so happy to be home.
434 N La Brea Ave Los Angeles, CA 90036
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Oliwia Dabrowska is the SYMBOL OF HOPE 2022, by Whitefish on Aug 30, 2022 19:53:54 GMT 1, No matter your race, color, creed, gender, or age all refugees are welcome. The discriminate marginalization of the world most vulnerable population is incalculable. With millions of refugees children now dispersed across the globe, please do what you can where you can do it. We must come together and unite in solidarity to lead by example and demonstrate HOPE and empathy.
HOPE is something that can be given and received, but most importantly it can be created and recycled. Together we have the chance to change the youth of our existence.
PEACE WHiTEFiSH
No matter your race, color, creed, gender, or age all refugees are welcome. The discriminate marginalization of the world most vulnerable population is incalculable. With millions of refugees children now dispersed across the globe, please do what you can where you can do it. We must come together and unite in solidarity to lead by example and demonstrate HOPE and empathy. HOPE is something that can be given and received, but most importantly it can be created and recycled. Together we have the chance to change the youth of our existence. PEACE WHiTEFiSH
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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New Space Invader Hoodies
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Oliwia Dabrowska is the SYMBOL OF HOPE 2022, by Whitefish on Aug 8, 2022 15:27:39 GMT 1,
B B B B B B
B B B B B
B B
B B
B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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What Music are you listening to at the moment ?, by Whitefish on Jul 28, 2022 19:04:12 GMT 1, www.thelastcult.org/
[Verse 1: 2-D & Thundercat] On Cracker Island, it was born To the collective of the dawn They were planting seeds at night To grow a made-up paradise Where the truth was auto-tuned (Forever cult) And it's sadness I consumed (Forever cult) Into my formats every day (Forever cult) In the end, I had to pay (What world is this?) In the end, I had to pay (I purged my soul) In the end, I had to pay (I drank to riot) Nothing more to say (I drank to riot)
[Chorus: 2-D] They taught themselves to be occult They didn't know its many strategies They taught themsеlves to be occult They didn't know its many stratеgies (Fantasies)
[Post-Chorus: Thundercat] What world is this? What world is this?
[Verse 2: 2-D & Thundercat] On Cracker Island, it was raised (Hey, hey, hey, hey) By the collective from the grave (Hey, hey, hey, hey) It only came out at night (Hey, hey, hey, hey) It ate up their paradise (Paradise) Where the truth was auto-tuned (Forever cult) And it's sadness I consumed (Forever cult) Into my formats everyday (Forever cult) In the end, I had to pay (What world is this?) Out there on my silver lake (I was not there) In the end, it will be grey (Beneath the hills) I'm like a ship between the tides (I saw myself) I held on, I survived (There in the void)
[Chorus: 2-D] They taught themselves to be occult They didn't know its many strategies They taught themselves to be occult They didn't know its many strategies (Fantasies)
[Verse 3: 2-D & Thundercat] On Cracker Island, it will die (Forever cult) Join the collective in the sky (Forever cult) And on the shining bolt of light (Forever cult) Go up to paradise (What world is this?) Where the truth is auto-tuned (I purged my soul) And it's sadness I consume (I drank to riot) Into my formats every day (I drank to riot) In the end, I had to pay (Forever cult) In the end, I had to pay (Forever cult) In the end, I'll be okay (Forever cult)
Outro: 2-D] Nothing more to say Nothing more to say Nothing more to say
www.thelastcult.org/[Verse 1: 2-D & Thundercat] On Cracker Island, it was born To the collective of the dawn They were planting seeds at night To grow a made-up paradise Where the truth was auto-tuned (Forever cult) And it's sadness I consumed (Forever cult) Into my formats every day (Forever cult) In the end, I had to pay (What world is this?) In the end, I had to pay (I purged my soul) In the end, I had to pay (I drank to riot) Nothing more to say (I drank to riot) [Chorus: 2-D] They taught themselves to be occult They didn't know its many strategies They taught themsеlves to be occult They didn't know its many stratеgies (Fantasies) [Post-Chorus: Thundercat] What world is this? What world is this? [Verse 2: 2-D & Thundercat] On Cracker Island, it was raised (Hey, hey, hey, hey) By the collective from the grave (Hey, hey, hey, hey) It only came out at night (Hey, hey, hey, hey) It ate up their paradise (Paradise) Where the truth was auto-tuned (Forever cult) And it's sadness I consumed (Forever cult) Into my formats everyday (Forever cult) In the end, I had to pay (What world is this?) Out there on my silver lake (I was not there) In the end, it will be grey (Beneath the hills) I'm like a ship between the tides (I saw myself) I held on, I survived (There in the void) [Chorus: 2-D] They taught themselves to be occult They didn't know its many strategies They taught themselves to be occult They didn't know its many strategies (Fantasies) [Verse 3: 2-D & Thundercat] On Cracker Island, it will die (Forever cult) Join the collective in the sky (Forever cult) And on the shining bolt of light (Forever cult) Go up to paradise (What world is this?) Where the truth is auto-tuned (I purged my soul) And it's sadness I consume (I drank to riot) Into my formats every day (I drank to riot) In the end, I had to pay (Forever cult) In the end, I had to pay (Forever cult) In the end, I'll be okay (Forever cult) Outro: 2-D] Nothing more to say Nothing more to say Nothing more to say
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Jean-Michel Basquiat 🇺🇸 Brooklyn, New York • Graffiti Art , by Whitefish on Jul 26, 2022 18:04:45 GMT 1, RARE Full Interview with Jean-Michel BASQUIAT (1983, SoHo)
This video was digitized from a VHS published in 1989 by INNER-TUBE VIDEO, directed and produced by Paul Tschinkel. The interview was conducted by Marc Miller, an art historian, curator, and professor at NYU.
A great peak behind the curtain for those inquiring minds...
RARE Full Interview with Jean-Michel BASQUIAT (1983, SoHo)
This video was digitized from a VHS published in 1989 by INNER-TUBE VIDEO, directed and produced by Paul Tschinkel. The interview was conducted by Marc Miller, an art historian, curator, and professor at NYU.
A great peak behind the curtain for those inquiring minds...
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Whitefish
Artist
Junior Member
Posts • 2,248
Likes • 2,442
February 2015
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Banksy funds Refugee Rescue boat, by Whitefish on Jul 18, 2022 16:02:57 GMT 1, July 18th 2022
"After eventful weeks, the Louise Michel is back in Spain, where our maintenance crew are busy preparing the ship for the next rescue operation. We are happy that 224 people could eventually be brought to a safe port in Europe, after four rescue operations. Also thanks to the cooperation with Sea Watch Crew. Once again we witnessed how crucial the civil fleet is, as European states brutally fight against people on the move and shamelessly ignore human rights. We saw how European authorities cooperate with armed groups from Libya, groups that are trained to violently and illegally prevent people from reaching Europe. While Europe ‘protects’ its borders in this way, the Mediterranean Sea remains one of the world's deadliest borders. This system is cruel and inhuman. It's about time that we start to protect human lives, human dignity and freedom, instead of borders."
Louise Michel Crew
July 18th 2022 "After eventful weeks, the Louise Michel is back in Spain, where our maintenance crew are busy preparing the ship for the next rescue operation. We are happy that 224 people could eventually be brought to a safe port in Europe, after four rescue operations. Also thanks to the cooperation with Sea Watch Crew. Once again we witnessed how crucial the civil fleet is, as European states brutally fight against people on the move and shamelessly ignore human rights. We saw how European authorities cooperate with armed groups from Libya, groups that are trained to violently and illegally prevent people from reaching Europe. While Europe ‘protects’ its borders in this way, the Mediterranean Sea remains one of the world's deadliest borders. This system is cruel and inhuman. It's about time that we start to protect human lives, human dignity and freedom, instead of borders." Louise Michel Crew
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