Paul SaitowitzThe kid from a broken home...
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Paul Saitowitz
The kid from a broken home with a busted tooth and a battered spirit
splattering graffiti-like images over a skateboard rife with dents
and dings from grinding on gutters never strove to be taken seriously
as an artist.
The established art world is littered with academics preoccupied
with explaining the polemics of different periods and movements from
days of yore to even recognize his art ... and anyway he doesn’t give
a rip.
Street art -- by way of skaters, punkers, hip-hoppers and street
kids with spray paint, cameras, pencils, house paint, chalk and
discarded junkyard parts -- has been steadily growing for more than a
decade on cities’ outskirts throughout the world. Up until recently,
the art world didn’t have a clue.
Saturday night at the Orange County Museum of Art, “Beautiful
Losers,” a show highlighting several of the artists from that
movement, will have its opening.
“There are all types of artists in the show -- some are skaters,
others aren’t,” show co-curator Aaron Rose said.
“They are all outside of the academic world and ... they’re
unified in their attitude.”
The “attitude” Rose is referring to is the core of the entire
movement -- “Do it Yourself.”
These artists never set out to be discovered and invited to have
their pieces put in museums. They created their own galleries and
promoted them with homemade fliers and graffiti.
Rose converted a rundown warehouse in an industrial section of New
York City into a makeshift mecca for street art in the mid-1990s.
“There were all these kids starting to make incredible original
art, and they needed a place to display it,” he said.
Craig Stecyk, an artist in the show, grew up in Venice and started
photographing skateboarding in its heyday with the infamous Dog-Town
crew.
He has had a firsthand look at the rise of iconographic designs
among board sports.
“These types of sports have always attracted creative people that
liked to do things on their own terms,” he said.
“A lot of them were artistic, so adorning their skateboards or
surfboards or building cars came naturally to them. The boards were
their canvases.”
Another artist is Ed Templeton, a high school dropout from
Huntington Beach, who grew up feeling alienated in a broken home. He
found refuge in art and skating.
Today, that refuge is no longer just a home for the alienated; the
rebellion has been cut to fit.
“I got into skateboarding because it was the polar opposite of a
team sport,” Templeton said.
“It was something I could do by myself. When I was growing up, the
people skating were outcasts. Now they are the cool kids in school.”
The inevitable acceptance of counterculture by the mainstream is
what has brought this type of art into established galleries like the
Orange County Museum of Art, but the rebel spirit cannot be falsely
duplicated.
“This type of art and the attitude is now used in major marketing
campaigns like Nike’s ‘Just Do It,’ which is trying to make people
feel rebellious about buying sneakers, but the thing about the DIY
ethic is that the people involved really don’t care about stuff like
that,” Templeton said.
“They’re not worried about anything accept doing their art.”
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