Missy Knows | Ravi Zupa

New Work Available at San Francisco Art Market

San Francisco Art Market April 27 - 30, 2017

Swing by the Hashimoto Contemporary booth at the San Fransisco Art Market to see some of my new work. Hashimoto will be selling Missy Knows, eight new print-based originals, and four drawings from the Bestiary series.

MISSY KNOWS

Missy Knows is on the more explicit and narrative end of what I tend to make. The central figure at the bottom is a samurai (chosen for their complex and dense relationship to self-inflicted death). There is another Samurai with an air horn who is perhaps making an attempt at waking the figure from his lethargy.

In the more flat and chaotic areas of the piece, the central portrait is of Missy Elliot (one of the greatest living avant garde artists, on par with Alexander Rodchenko and David Byrne) painted from her high school year book photo. I chose her partly as a shout out to one of my favorites, but also because she is so unrelentingly positive and bursting, overflowing with love for her people. All of this, despite an extremely difficult and abusive early life. If Missy can survive and stay full of love and joy, then there is certainly hope for the rest of us. 

Bestiary | Ravi Zupa

BESTIARY SERIES

These are a handful of original pieces from the Age of Enlightenment series. Sometimes unsettling, sometimes light, often mysterious—they depict odd scenes combining characters from the ancient world, mythological creatures and ordinary objects of our modern life. These four pieces are all birds and remind us of the ancient bestiaries which cataloged mythological animals. 


Announcing The "Countdown to Justice - Emergency Fund" Project

Announcing Countdown to Justice - Emergency Fund

A Project in Partnership with Art Responders to Combat Police Brutality

COUNTDOWN TO JUSTICE – EMERGENCY FUND

3 Editions in Series (see below)

11″ x 17″ 1-color screen print
100 LB Paper
Signed and numbered
$35

Proceeds from each print donated to organizations serving victims & advocacy in communities affected by police brutality.

MEDIA COVERAGE

Mass Appeal

Denver Westword

PROJECT INSPIRATION

Sometimes it can seem like police violence against unarmed black Americans is a problem on the rise in our country, when actually it has only become more visible. There is some evidence, in fact, that the public outcry has had an impact on the problem and that 2016 saw fewer of these incidents than 2015. In recent months however, since the election of our new president, this particular issue has receded from view to some degree but the problem persists and it is extremely serious.

I have never experienced this particular kind of loss but I did lose my father and later a brother, both to complicated and troubling violence, so I can empathize to some degree. My heart hurts every time I learn of these horrible events. I created these three prints, as a way to raise money to help combat the problem when and where it happens.

The majority of text in these posters was lifted from Kendrick Lamar, Chance the Rapper and Vince Staples, three of the most brilliant musicians working today. The inspiration for the style of the images came from the 19th century Mexican print-maker Jose Guadalupe Posada, one of my favorite relief artists.

The images were originally carved from the interior of ordinary traffic cones and printed on an antique printing press. The final poster is a one color screen print on 100 LB paper. Watch the video below to get a glimpse into the process.

ABOUT ART RESPONDERS

Art Responders is a Bay Area-based nonprofit that designs transformative grassroots arts programs with a social justice focus. Founded in 2013 by artist-educator D.E. Stenvoll-Wells, Art Responders’ public art events aim to document injustice, heal targeted communities and incite action. They also provide a comprehensive array of educational resources and workshops designed to resist systemic oppression through a marriage of arts, activism and advocacy.

The Emergency Fund Project is a collaboration between Art Responders and Ravi Zupa as a component of ANTIVIRAL: Countdown to Restorative Justice, a six-day series of art and education interventions staged in the Bay Area in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the Los Angeles uprisings of 1992.

As part of this six-day series in the Bay Area, Art Responders will exhibit all three final posters alongside the original sections of traffic cone from which they were carved and printed (see process video below).

The inevitability of police killings of unarmed civilians is an on going American tragedy that must be addressed. This partnership between Zupa and Art Responders aims to keep stolen lives in the public eye, and enables art lovers to show their support for criminal justice reform and a future without fear of law enforcement.

HOW THE PROJECT WORKS

 

  • ALL THE PROFITS WILL BE DONATED
    Each print will cost 35 dollars (though people are welcome to donate more). All of that money, including the cost of printing, will be donated to local organizations dedicated to victims and advocacy in the affected communities. Art Responders will research and choose these organizations based on the particular location and details of that tragedy. This information will be posted before the release.
  • EACH PRINT WILL BE RELEASED AFTER AN INCIDENT
    Since the new president took office there has been a noticeable lack of attention on these kinds of tragedies. This project is an effort to bring some of that attention back. The first print will be released in the weeks following one of these incidents. The second print will be released after the second incident and so on.
  • WE’LL CELEBRATE IF THERE’S NO VIOLENCE
    Obviously it is preferable if no unarmed citizens are killed by police. If between now and April 29th, There are no such incidents posted on the Fatal Force website, the first of these prints will be released and sold at the cost of materials (approximately $1.00 per print plus shipping). The second print will be released 30 days after that (if again there are no tragedies) and the third on June 30th.
  • SPREAD THE WORD
    If more of us are watching, then more of us can come to the aid of those hurt when it matters most. The final edition size will be determined by the amount of interest we see from the public. Feel free to let others know about this project through news outlets, blogs, social media and word of mouth.

HOW THE PRINTS ARE MADE

THE PRINTS

The Cops Shot You | Ravi Zupa Emergency Fund
Never Ran | Ravi Zupa Emergency Fund
Be Alright | Ravi Zupa Emergency Fund