"If Pop artists responded to the shiny new consumer culture that emerged after World War II, graffiti artists responded to its decay, reflecting disillusionment and broken promises. This underbelly of consumerism also surfaces in several large, immersive installations. 'Street Market' by Todd James, Barry McGee and Stephen Powers is a facsimile of a clutch of narrow city streets lined with decaying, fetid buildings and bedecked with cheap electric signage. The buildings are filled with what look like miniature art studios and makeshift living spaces that can be glimpsed only through the windows; they’re like little dens of creativity amid the ruins of consumer society."
Sharon Mizota in the Los Angeles Times reviews "Art in the Streets" at the Geffen Contemporary Gallery.
Friday, April 29, 2011
"A Bombastic, Near-Overwhelming Cavalcade of Eye Candy"
Labels:
art,
Los Angeles,
museums,
New York,
twentieth century,
youth
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