New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

1 year ago

New artists to watch

These artists were voted on from this week’s list by members of the content and curation teams at SuperRare Labs.

Digital Artist, Photographer and overthinker since 2011. Actually exploring Ai, minimalism and narrative.  

Alone

Edition 1 of 1

Alone Made with Ai by textrnr  

Artist in the style of “Subjective Realism” My paintings are exhibited in France, England, Australia, Germany, etc. 

Oblation ~ “Revivere” oil painting

Edition 1 of 1

My animated in “Revivere” style oil painting “Oblation”. 1/1 NFT “Oblation” oil on canvas 200 x 165 cm (79 x 65 inch) 2016 Priests and sacrifices. Donors and those to whom these sacrifices are intended. Everyone is tied up in this tangle. We sacrifice ourselves for others and others for ourselves. We sacrifice freedom for love, fun for peace, life for eternity. We sacrifice our bodies and souls. We ourselves eat these sacrifices and feed small parasites, always accompanying us. Maybe sacrifice is the basis of all being? Or is this the biggest misconception that prevents us from living?

create art to process the intensity and profound strangeness of the collective human experience.  

Daydreaming

Edition 1 of 1

I like to travel, travel to a place where I am free flowing on top of the world. Somewhere where all the burdens don’t feel too heavy, all I feel is being uplifted. I feel more deeply, I feel more free, I truly belong in this world that I created. My creative dreamland, my safe space, where I am the center of my universe. I am boundless, I take pieces of it into my art. I try to make this world into my reality, I truly feel like myself here.  

New artists on SuperRare

art-ist  

Chaos Town

Edition 1 of 1

My bags are falling… Running behind it… Will I ever get it back? I even mint artwork… And I burn them I know I am on fire! But I have to keep on going… I have to keep on going  

Artist and collector.  

WAGMI

Edition 1 of 1

WAGMI, oil on canvas, 146×114 cm, 2023. First artwork of the series WAGMI, a collection where art history, cryptoart, popular iconography and great myths come together on the same canvas.  

CG Artist who loves to create dystopian and futuristic dark atworks from his dreams or perhaps from his nightmares.  

Opening face

Edition 1 of 1

Opening face How do you see the future? Here is my vision of the future through this facial implant inspired by Ghost in the Shell. This implant contains in its center a nuclear generator to power all the devices of the body. 1500 x 2000 pixels 182 frames loop 2023 by impossible.realities  

Portrait (Aux Camélias)

Edition 1 of 1

A digital painting.  

Lifetime artist, with nearly decade working professionally as figurative sculptor.

Radiant Rumination

Edition 1 of 1

We can see that this piece is full of contrapositions. From the myriad of hues, the rough textures of the modeling on the subtle background, to even the sizes of the characters, all contribute to creating a surreal effect. Similar to the ceiling of the Capella Scrovegni (1303) that inspired this environment, it creates a majestic space that plays with that contrast of colors with its hundreds of yellow stars painted on its blue ceiling. This work is an allegory to contemplation, one that this ambiance stimulates, eternally encouraging us to disconnect from the weight that we carry on our shoulders daily. An increasingly unusual, but very necessary gesture.  

knight of despair warrior of beauty  

[ no faith ]

Edition 1 of 1

I am still lost between worlds ruins of a romantic disaster a ghost of a future me I am lost I am nothing I am no faith I am still here (for Angelica) One image. Two different creative processes merged together. Digital process: photo manipulation (ruins of a romantic disaster). + Physical process: spray paint on inkjet print (a ghost of a future me). = [ no faith ] Original stock photography: Ksenia Honcharova  

I’m suffering from Multiple Art Disorder  

LFG

Edition 1 of 1

The uncanny performance of the sick subconscious..  
20

SuperRare Magazine

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Art

Tech

Curators' Choice

New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

New artists on SuperRare

1 year ago

New artists to watch

These artists were voted on from this week’s list by members of the content and curation teams at SuperRare Labs.

never die before going to outer space  

never die before going to outer space

Edition 1 of 1

I want to somehow get out of the earth and bring my body into outer space. Unconsciously trying to create a meditative state. A universe that I create myself, not something I learned from someone else. Trust only the sense of perception based on my own experience and thoughts. In any case, the trigger to take me into space is provided by the crypto. Only this experience cannot be deceived by virtual digital. That needs to be true physically. Please take me there. Digital painting, Kazuhiro Aihara, 2023  

Not really photographer. So long and too much exposures.  

That which remains

Edition 1 of 1

“If the world were a museum of memories, a collection of places she’d outgrown.” That which remains when we leave. That which remains when we stay. That which remains of the time that passes. That which remains of us. That which remains when we change. Long exposure is the technique I use to create the connection between my body and my inner world. The way to make my feelings and thoughts visible.  

multidisciplinary artist and experimental musician with synaesthesia, Jake-Andrew’s practice explores sensory perception and digital manipulation.  

“January: 23.01.23”

Edition 1 of 1

“January: 23.01.23″ 1/1 2023 SuperRare Genesis “A Year In Colour” Collection 4200x5455px at 300dpi Throughout my artistic career, all my work has been synaesthetic; in that I experience sound/music as colour, texture and movement and transcribe these forms and emotional responses into a visual language. This year long series however will draw reference from a book I read during my Masters “Wednesday is Indigo Blue”. A book which describes how us synaesthetes assign colour and texture to periods of time/days/experiences via our emotional response. As the year progresses, new pieces will be minted chronicling events alongside everyday minutiae and will be assigned their corresponding colour score. The conversations, the music, the resonant hum this will all go into each piece, building towards a collection that composes a colour map. At the end of the year, this will be used as a blueprint to create a projection/sound installation. This project is my “Year In Colour” but an invitation for you all to come along for the ride 🌈  

New artists on SuperRare

Artist  

Get Lost in Colors

Edition 1 of 1

Technique: Spray paint on the wall. Coordinate: 41°05’32.7″N 28°58’22.2″E

Christ

Edition 1 of 1

A painting of Christ  

Moody Surrealist  

The Black Sheep

Edition 1 of 1

If you too identify as a black sheep who likes to take long walks with your black cloud and your black fish, this is for you.  

Seeing Red • Milked from the Motherboard • Kissed by Chaos

D@T@ B@NDITS

Edition 1 of 1

iKu: Wild west skelly-fleshes Information parasites Star blood lunar leak 3840 x 2160 digital ink CPUBL00D.(01001010)v0100100111111101).010011101001001  

Art from my mind to yours  

A Mask Won’t Hide Who You Are Inside.

Edition 1 of 1

All our lives we tend to get conflicted with who we are, We find ourselves running from our own identity Living in denial of certain things that we just haven’t developed the courage to embrace about ourselves But we all have to get to the point where it doesn’t matter anymore, The point where we realize that in order to find purpose we must embrace who we really are inside We must stop hiding under masks so we can see our paths clearly. We must learn to detach the person we think we are from the person we really are. Because a Mask Won’t Hide Who We Are Inside. -AnjolaDave  

Multidisciplinary artist, painting pictures of guttas to air out galleries.  

Discussion of Refutable Culture

Edition 1 of 1

“Discussion of Refutable Culture /My Brother to Shower With All His Ice On” Grew up in chains and you wonder why I shower with all my ice on? Subject to nothing but confined by everything is the slave I describe. I Refute the Culture, but freeing myself of the cycle only subjects those who proceed me to take the same path through what is unknown.  

Recovering vampire.  

bubble boy

Edition 1 of 1

After ten years of vicious, bordering on violent debate between traditionalists and the emerging AI art movement, it was decided: Young aspiring artists must be pure, free of any outside influence. In the 2030s, art academies popped up that promised parents their children would be trained without any risk of impression. All ideas were to have a clear chain of thought, traceable to their genesis. To do so, students were made to wear nanometric bubbles. These contraptions would screen out any influence (visual, audio, or otherwise) that could possibly impact their art. They were known as bubble boys and bubble girls, in a nod to the early 2000s “Bubble Boy” movie, which had joined the ranks of “Citizen Kane” and “Casablanca” of all-time classic films. Instead of relying on influence, these pupils would be trained intensely in the technical skills of drawing, painting, and color theory. Simon was one such student enrolled at the Warhol Academy of Art, one of the most prolific institutions of the new method, that had expanded locations rapidly thanks to cheap debt and franchising. His parents were fans and collectors of Warhol’s work and were ecstatic for their son to follow in the legend’s footsteps. However, Simon was never able to live up to their dreams. He would bring home detailed sketches of fruit bowls and landscapes, but they lacked a sense of soul (or perspective, for that matter). Disappointment was on their lips. Over dinner each night, as Simon would bring in food through his bubble’s information-secure valve, they would ask him: “How is it going at school, honey?” After weeks of what felt like a nightly interrogation, Simon became despondent. He was doing what he was told to do. He was creating things that were pure. There was no outside influence. No “crutch” to rely on, no homage to point to. He was free of inspiration, and seemingly, free of talent. // An ai-assisted piece by ClownVamp. Part of the panicland series, an exploration of moral panic.
20

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Curators' Choice

WTF ARE DYNAMIC NFTS?

WTF ARE DYNAMIC NFTS?

“Portals” by Sutu and Aloner One, 2022.

WTF ARE DYNAMIC NFTS?

1 year ago

Yes, NFTs have provided potential new pathways for the authentication, monetization, and archivability of digital art, but what’s become apparent in the past few years is that art registered on the blockchain includes more than static, unchanging objects like JPEGs or MP4s.

“Fl♡♡ded” by Violet Forest, 2022. 

Dynamic NFTs

For the purpose of this article, I’m defining Dynamic NFTs as works of art that react to data input or output. These reactions may include touch, gaze, wallet interaction, or even live feeds of web data. The key aspect here is that dynamic systems engage us in a circuit of communication, a visceral feedback loop. The interactive qualities of dynamic NFTs, because we are physical beings, makes even two-dimensional objects spatial.

Although the concept of variable artwork interacting with external stimuli is not novel, when coupled with NFTs, the possibilities grow exponentially. This marks a larger shift in culture, not dissimilar to moving images over a century ago. As creators, the ways in which we can now articulate meaning with spatial and responsive systems are staggering, not to mention the new methods of distribution available with Web3.

At present, we can think of dynamic NFTs in three very general ways:

Dynamic : spatial and responsive systems that react to input

Most NFT marketplaces allow users to upload 3D models. These are usually displayed in an HTML canvas with minimal javascript controls for rotating and zooming. But if the artist is controlling the code, they can make their work do almost anything and respond to the viewer’s (conscious or unconscious) input. This creates a circuit and makes work feel alive.

The House of Bluebeard” by Karim Maaloul uses both a directorial POV and free camera movement to tell variations on stories.

Generative Art

To over simplify, I’ll define generative art as work generated from a predefined construct, such as art generated from code. Generative Art has many permutations, including work generated at the time of mint. Whereas dynamic works are continuously generated in response to third-party input. More and more, these areas are merging.

Zach Lieberman‘s generative work here show him navigating around around on of his pieces.

Smart Contracts

Working with the smart contracts behind NFTs opens up a new set of artistic possibilities we are just beginning to grasp. Controlling contracts can allow you to specify how you want the work to exist over time, or change based on events. 

The codeGirl contract allows us to update mini chapters of a story as visuals evolve and text changes.

As you can tell, even in this overly simplistic breakdown, all three of these areas overlap.

Indeed, this entire space itself is dynamic.

Tools to create Dynamic NFTs

How are people making these at present?

Building Dynamic Systems

The most common ways to create spatial and responsive systems is with javascript rendered in an HTML document. This can either be all code or code in conjunction with other files (often 3D objects exported as .glTF, or .usdz). These files exist on the decentralized Web, are culled together by the contract, and rendered in real-time through a browser/webGPU.

By and large, the first platform that gave us this option was Hic et Nunc (originally hicetnunc.xyz on the Tezos blockchain) early in 2021. I point to artists like Karim Maaloul & Aloner One, whose works show a combination of classic artistic talent and technical mastery. The code gives us the feeling of freely moving around these spaces, while the beauty of these handcrafted 3D worlds gives us agency to explore them. There are many ways to create these kinds of javascript applications (Three.js / Babylon.js / Playcanvas / Polygon.js among them). More and more are coming out by the day as classic coding environments start to resemble game engines where creators apply realtime behaviors to artistic assets. In fact, Unity3D allows you to export to WebGL and Needle-Tools (bete) allows you to export three.js from Unity. An example is Aloner One’s collaboration with Sutu. While sites like Async Art give access to interactive blueprints, artists don’t need to code to make dynamic work.

Portals,” 2022. Karim Maaloul and Aloner One collaborate to show different perspectives or portals on each other’s work.

This brings me to:

Creating Generative Art

While generative art can exist in other NFT marketplaces, there are some dedicated platforms like ArtBlocks (built on Ethereum) & fx(hash) (built on Tezos) which make it a primary focus. Specific ways of building generative work usually depend on the platform you are minting on: The art in ArtBlocks is purely on-chain, inside the contract. The beauty of this alone is brilliant, but an artist has to be a coder or be collaborating with one. With fx(hash) you can generate works that embed files within an html canvas. Often the dynamic part of these works happens at the time of minting, when parameters are randomly generated. More and more artists are creating generative systems that are also responsive to user input.

Newyellow’s interactive work allows users to start a physics simulation. “Overstacked #253,” 2022.

This is where I first saw Newyellow’s work, made with 3D assets and javascript libraries. It’s both interactive (i.e. tap to spawn) and generative. The artist thinks of this as “Living Art.” The term “Dynamic NFT,” he believes, may be misleading as it opens the door to objects outside of fine art, like POAPs (proof of attendance protocols) and things we can do with contracts. Some of the best digital artists are working in this arena: Zach Lieberman’s practice is thrilling to watch; his daily sketches (created in Xcode w openFrameworks ) feel like paintings, and his dynamic AR work is almost cinematic. Leander Herzog creates amazing work with .svg, shaders & webGL; they are responsive to mouse taps with different kinds of audio visual inputs that always feel like they are on the verge of making sense. His range is incredible. He’s also begun to write his own contracts.

“Gerhard” by Richard Nadler and Leander Herzog, 2022.

Writing Smart Contracts

Ethereum contracts are written in Solidity; Tezos contracts are written in Michelson; Solana contracts are written in Rust. If we don’t have the time to learn these languages, there are templates and services which allow creators to open up more of a contract’s potentia.l. Manifold is free and enables a variety of abilities from designing your own ASCII art to specifying where and how your work is hosted on the decentralized web. Thirdweb is another free service opening up to Polygon, Solana, Flow and others. There are also subscription services like NiftyKit which give you even more features, options and customer support. And more and more services, like Monegraph, are recognizing the potential of working with artists to define this new space. This is a different kind of dynamism than the spatial, responsive work that I’ve been highlighting, but taken together, they imbue work with a sense of biophilia.

Entrophy: 147” by 0xDEAFBEEF, 2021. 

For instance, although it’s written in C, a famous example of this is DEAFBEEF’s Entropy series, which “degrades” itself each time the work transfers to a new owner: a deceptively simple but extremely elegant idea, since the digital mirrors the analogue. Writing the smart contract gives the ability to control how the work exists and changes over time (i.e. how the work “lives” after you mint). Like Beeple’s “Human One,” the work can be updated as long as the program is running. Ian Cheng’s upcoming collaboration with Outland, 3Face, reads your digital wallet, infers your personality, and adapts to you over time. The code can update the piece, you can update the contract, or you can update the content the contract points to.

Human One” by Beeple, 2021.

While I haven’t heard about similar services for Tezos, after Hic et Nunc went dark, other Tezos platforms like Teia, Objkt, Versum, and Fx(hash) rose up, and each has its own abilities that tap into the contract (collaborations, wallet splits, social functions, etc).

What platforms can you mint/sell dynamic NFTs on?

Marketplaces back the work up for you (on IPFS or Arweave, or even a centralized server) when you mint, but as such, they have file size limitations and little knowledge of whether your work is in fact stored (for example, is it pinned for permanence?).

Minting Dynamic Systems (webGl /javascript /html)

Unless you write your own contracts, minting this type of work can only be done on the Tezos marketplaces I’ve mentioned, as you can upload .zip files containing javascript applications and associated files. Violet Forest, a developer working with Hic et Nunc in 2021, was consistently pushing the boundaries of what she could do with the platform. Whether working with XR, game engines, three.js, photogrammetry, or AI, her playful creativity across technologies evokes a sense of wonder for the medium itself.

Self Portrait” by Carla Gannis, 2021.

Carla Gannis and Martina Menegon are each both create amazing dynamic AR works using 3D scans & photogrammetry in performative ways; this arena has so much potential, and both push this space forward artistically and conceptually. Other than navigating around 3D or AR objects, most Ethereum NFT platforms have very limited dynamic abilities. This is true for both minting and displaying dynamic work. However, this is changing, principally with smart contract tools.

Minting generative works

At the moment, this is best done with ArtBlocks and Fx(hash). Each has specific methods to create and mint. However, as we begin to see more appreciation for generative art, we see new ways of working with it and new platforms dedicated to the medium.

Minting your own smart contract

Minting with each contract service I’ve mentioned is different. But when you create a new contract (with Manifold for example) each of the works you mint on that contract will display in that contract’s collection on OpenSea, Rarible, Zora and many others marketplaces. Even Foundation has just opened up to Manifold contracts. You also have some control as to how and where your work is stored, but these still don’t always display correctly (based on web protocols/ browsers and mobile devices). We are in early stages, and it’s best to reach out directly to the marketplaces via Discord or GgitHhub.

Likewise I’m also seeing a trend with creators (such as KNNY or JOY who take charge of their own contracts going one step further and creating personal marketplaces. Often this is because, while more artists are creating interactive NFTs, many marketplaces don’t display dynamic work correctly, depending on their own web protocols and permissions. Likewise, some browsers and mobile devices have their own limitations. I like to think this is temporary, because I foresee an adoption of open standards and a willingness by marketplaces to both embrace and display this work properly.

Working in these seemingly incongruous, unexplored or undefined areas often yields the most important results:

Here I must note Regina Harsanyi’s recent On Screen Presence with Feral File; an amazing curation of dynamic performances by Golan Levin, 0xDEAFBEEF, Every Icon, Wiena Lin, and Molly Soda (pictured below). They adroitly push us to question the ways we think about the tangible vs. the digital, the live vs. the virtual, static work vs. dynamic experience.

Likewise, other great artists and thinkers in this space (Sasha Stiles, Nathaniel Stern, Culturehacker, Mario Klingemann, VerticalCrypto Art & Botto) are working with AI and questioning ideas of augmentation and authorship in their practice.

It’s important to mention because, in the very near future, AI and ML models may be running alongside our art as real-time docents or co-authors, both in our process of creation and the display of work.

Net art / interactive installations and “video games as art” are at least three decades old, so although not new, blockchain, spatial (XR) displays, and Web3 distribution have turbo-charged the arts. Remember, Muybridge’s Zoopraxiscope and Edison’s Kinetoscope were around before the Lumiere brothers projected moving images and codified “Cinema;” maybe blockchain was the crucial next step for dynamic artwork.

This dynamism will be a defining characteristic of art and NFTs, whatever we end up calling it.

42

John Benton

John Benton is an artist, writer, developer working at the intersection of: Film, Art & Spatial Computing. His work with technology centers on designing responsive, narrative and information systems. These work on a decentralized Web, across displays. But he still writes in cursive, works from life and studies the masters. His art practice spans the range of physical and digital methods and outputs. He teaches Film, XR and Game Design at NYU, SVA and FIT in NYC.  

Art

Tech

Curators' Choice

New Artists on SuperRare

New Artists on SuperRare

New Artists on SuperRare

1 year ago

New artists to watch

These artists were voted on from this week’s list by members of the content and curation teams at SuperRare Labs.

my return to earth

Edition 1 of 1

a fall from grace. a fallen angel  

Body art NFT artist  

White Crown

Edition 1 of 1

The white color of her crown reflects the color of her soul. She is cold-blooded and not emotional. She is cold on the outside, but she has a lot of warmth inside. Only to a few will she open her soul. Someone she truly trusts. Bodyart is made by me personally on me.

artist illustrator  

In Creativity We Trust

Edition 1 of 1

How much would you sacrifice for your dreams? – Handdrawn frame-by-frame animation.  

New artists on SuperRare

𝓟𝓻𝓸𝓫𝓪𝓫𝓵𝔂 𝔂𝓸𝓾𝓻 𝓷𝓮𝔀 𝓯𝓪𝓿𝓸𝓻𝓲𝓽𝓮 𝓪𝓻𝓽𝓲𝓼𝓽  

Hiding in your shadow

Edition 1 of 1

I love hiding in the shadows. In other peoples shadows. I feel naked and vulnerable when the spotlight shines on me and I fear it more than anything. I lived my life like this, always hiding. I hide here too but I’ve had my moments of bravery, moments where I’ve been honest and heartbreakingly naked. This is a piece of me, made with magazines pages and watercolor and countless layers of spray paint.  

make art to do hit run with your emotions… 

Infinite Games: The Miscreant

Edition 1 of 1

The epoch of infinite games The sanctuary of chaos The ceaseless ennui The ascent of fury The questioners The Miscreant (Ai collage x digital overpainting)

Exploring the beauty of emotions  

A Tale From The Past

Edition 1 of 1

We live in the world without knowing our memories of the past. They allow us to learn and make sense of new experiences, and to recall information and past experiences that we can use to inform our present and future decisions. They also play a role in our emotional well-being, allowing us to reminisce about happy experiences and to learn from negative ones. Additionally, memories help to shape our identity and sense of self. Without the ability to form and recall memories, we would be unable to navigate our environment, learn from our experiences, or have a sense of continuity in our lives.  

Exploring the human subconscious through digital art.  

Rapture

Edition 1 of 1

Let the joy carry you away.  

picnicking at the hanging rock.  

Rebirth

Edition 1 of 1

“The dark night of the soul comes just before revelation.” Joseph Campbell AI + Photoshop  

Journey West

Edition 1 of 1

When I captured this photo I instantly got hit with a feeling of nostalgia for all those old 50’s films like Strangers on a Train and North by Northwest; A time when traveling by train was a great luxury. Pictured here is the Rocky Mountaineer train, it was designed to be a sightseeing vehicle that would service between Vancouver, Calgary and Jasper. Later on they added Colorado to Utah as a route, making it a classic way to travel the west.  

Performance Art Imagemaker — devise personas to immerse myself in themes of body, identity, bio/necropolitics and crypto.

Commercial Rights to Human

Edition 1 of 1

2527 x 3790 jpeg, self-portrait. Inspired by the arguments in the Crypto space about the ambiguity and confusion around NFT licensing; building on the body of my work where, in a performative, experimental way and often involving risk, I place myself with open-ended outcomes as an instrument for fostering discussion on relevant societal themes; and taking the opportunity granted by the September 2022 release of the “Can’t Be Evil” NFT templates based on the Creative Commons, I decided to make a self-portrait, mint my own image in the Ethereum blockchain and grant the owner of the respective NFT the CBE-NECR copyright license : “Non-Exclusive Commercial Rights (Creator Retains Exploitation Rights)”, meaning: The holder of the NFT has full rights to copy, display, distribute, modify, adapt and commercially use this image of my body, while I retain the same rights and any buyer of this NFT, at any time, agrees to have read and automatically accepts these terms: Full license terms available in the URL (arweave) : https://arweave.net/_D9kN1WrNWbCq55BSAGRbTB4bS3v8QAPTYmBThSbX3A/2  
20

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Curators' Choice

Art as Emotional and Scientific Process: A Look into Michael Alan Alien’s Multidisciplinary Practice

Art as Emotional and Scientific Process: A Look into Michael Alan Alien’s Multidisciplinary Practice

“UNIQUE AND BEAUTIFUL” by Michael Alan Alien, 2023. 5’’x7’’watercolor, pen and ink, colored pencil, gouache, and marker on paper.

Art as Emotional and Scientific Process: A Look into Michael Alan Alien’s Multidisciplinary Practice

1 year ago

Michael Alan Alien in his studio, New York City. Photo by Mika Bar-On Nesher.

Michael Alan Alien is dropping his genesis on SuperRare this month, but the New York native is no stranger to the crypto art space; his first collection sold out within minutes. Long before entering the NFT space, Alan Alien already had an impressive career in both the traditional art world and the underground street art movement, gaining national attention in media outlets like The New York TImes, Vice, NBC Today, GQ, Hyperallergic, Marie Claire, Huffington Post, and others. SuperRare curator Mika Bar-On Nesher visited Michael’s studio in Soho one afternoon to learn more about the iconic artist and his plans for future drops on SuperRare.

Working closely with his partner and collaborator Jadda Cat, Michael’s art extends beyond the canvas and paper into performance art and sculpture. No matter what medium he works in, Alan Alien’s voice and line shine consistently through. An outsider that never wanted to fit into any system or society, he watches and listens to everything around him, absorbing the information like an open portal–the result is a kind of imprint of the city he grew up in, a mixture of buildings and things overhead on street corners, all mixed in an incredible motion of captured atrophy. 

“LIFE’S RIDE” by Michael Alan Alien, 2019. 11” x 14” watercolor, ink, spray pen, pencil on paper.

 

Mika Bar-On Nesher: Who are your artistic influences?

Michael Alan Alien: My first influence was Dalí. I was isolated from any knowledge of art when I was growing up in NYC. I didn’t visit museums or galleries, or know of any other fine artists, but my father had a Dalí print which I’d study every day. I was inspired by graffiti in New York City, as well as punk and metal record labels covers that my neighbors traded with me for my Star Wars figures. The Iron Maiden covers kick ass. As I got myself into a position where I could educate myself with fine art, some artists that have inspired me are Klimt, Egon Schiele, M.C. Escher, and Crumb. 

It’s very hard for anyone who grew up with nothing in a wealthy city to break into the art world. It’s been very difficult to be accepted in a culture built on classism.

MBON: Does music play an important part of your process?

MAA: I spend my time looking at life, looking into the unknown, looking at breathing, looking at movement, looking at pain, looking for positivity. The way I see life is with sound and music. When I observe my surroundings and people, I hear a soundtrack in the background. I paint to that.

I also make sound collage music here and there as part of The Living Installation theater performances. You can listen to some of the music on Bandcamp.

“TEST SUBJECT” by Michael Alan Alien, 2020. Mixed media, paint marker, stickers, metallic paint, blow pen, marker, colored pencil on black book cover.

MBON: How would you describe the transition from working in the studio to performance? Tell us about your process a little for your different forms of expression. 

MAA: I dedicate hours each day to drawing and painting, whether I work from the studio or go outside to create at different locations in the city. I have a select group of works that I work on outside, letting the streets and nature hit them. I draw from the energy of my surroundings and interactions with people as I work. This outdoor creation is performative and interactive. I often wear a QR code box on my head as a statement about where we are as a society with technology. Passersby can scan, interact and learn more about the work. I walk around the city with my cane and set up my easel to stand and work on medium to large pieces doing action work. I push myself daily to go out and create and bring disability awareness to people I meet. When I work from my studio I lay on the floor since my physical disabilities prevent me from working at a desk. I refine and reflect on the energy from the outdoor work, focused on detail work.

MBON: How do you feel the art scene in the city has changed?

MAA: In the 80’s art was built from the ground up. It was raw, revolutionary, and evolved slowly and organically. Groups of different kinds of people were discovering and sharing their scenes and interacting. It was the birth of downtown New York art. People still travel here from all around the world looking for it.

Now we have overnight success based on Tiktok numbers, quick fads, and an over saturation of art shows that seem to lack authenticity. The New York art scene now seems to be about devouring trends instead of creating a culture. That’s not to say that the direction can’t change.

“TRINITY OF ILLUSION” by Michael Alan Alien, 2021. 11’’x14’’ watercolor, ink, colored pencil on paper.

MBON: Do you have advice for emerging artists? 

MAA: Be careful of a physical gallery that meets you and wants you to have a solo show in a month and doesn’t understand your work. Growth takes development. There are a lot of shifty characters in the art world that just want to make a buck. Google search a gallery to see if they’ve gone to federal prison. Be careful who you work with and don’t give away your soul. Explore, grow, create, practice, and make work that you feel deeply. Make work that you love and we will see the rest.

MBON: What pillars in your impressive career mean the most to you and why? 

MAA: I don’t really look at my art as a career. I look at my art as an emotional and scientific process. I think the most important thing I’ve done is during the pandemic, shifting my practice to creating art publicly in NYC daily, keeping the spirit of old New York going, and connecting with the world outside.

“THE GREAT AMERICAN SQUEEZE” by Michael Alan Alien, 2021. 11’’x14’’ watercolor, cut and repurposed drawings, metallic ink, paint marker, ink on paper.

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Mika Bar On Nesher

Mika is a writer and filmmaker based in NYC. They are a Curator at SuperRare @superraremika  

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