Meggs in VNA magazine

Submitted by Anthony on August 5, 2009
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Melbourne artist Meggs has been featured in the latest issue of VNA magazine. With contemporary pop and street art awash in flaky comic and cartoon motifs Meggs stands out as an artist of substance.

Pop art has always been commercial, but today sometimes it just feels like a cynical cash grab, as though all it takes to become an uber-trendy rockstar artist or designer is to monotonously regurgitate fuzzy childhood nostalgia for the masses. Who needs to challenge the perceptions of their audience or the boundaries of one's own expressive ability? Just keep doodling the same cloyingly inane pop-culture signifiers over and over and watch the coin come in.

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Feature Interview: Andrew Lee

Submitted by Anthony on June 30, 2009
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Andrew Lee is the creator of the invisible:man label plus California's Commissary stores. As streetwear becomes ever more vacuously mainstream Lee has maintained the raw honesty of his abrasive punk-soaked art. Free of trendy pretension his work has stayed fiercely personal and true to an outsider's way of life.

After a short hiatus Lee has revived invisible:man, recently opening a new i:m store in NY. I caught up with him to check where he's at and see where his creative interests have taken him.

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Andrew Lee

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invisible:man

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Submitted by Anthony on May 25, 2009
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Give me change... hold the fries. New Com Raid stuff out soon. RSS or join the mailing list for release details.

Feature Interview: Emory Douglas

Submitted by Anthony on May 5, 2009
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As the Black Panther Party's Minister of Culture, Emory Douglas has had a profound influence on shaping the visual language of dissent and revolution both in America and abroad. His vivid artwork for the The Black Panther newspaper is today an iconic record of the turbulen period in American history that provoked it. More than a great artist, Emory Douglas was and continues to be a tireless servant of his community. His art speaks directly to the aspirations, fears and determination of his people. Their struggles are his own.

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Emory Douglas

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Black Panther Minister of Culture, 1967-1980

Feature Interviews

invisible:man

Black Panther Minister of Culture, 1967-1980

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