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May 01, 2010 — May 29, 2010
18 Wooster Street, New York
Deitch Projects is pleased to present May Day, an exhibition of new work
by Shepard Fairey, as its final project. Titled not only in reference
to the day of the exhibition’s opening, the multiple meanings of May Day
resonate throughout the artist's new body of work. Originally a
celebration of spring and the rebirth it represents, May Day is also
observed in many countries as International Worker's Day or Labor Day, a
day of political demonstrations and celebrations coordinated by unions
and socialist groups. “Mayday” is also the distress signal used by
pilots, police and firefighters in times of emergency.
With energy and urgency befitting the title May Day, Fairey captures the
radical spirit of each of his subjects, using portraiture to celebrate
some of the artists, musicians and political activists he most admires.
Says Fairey, "These people I'm portraying were all revolutionary, in one
sense or another. They started out on the margins of culture and ended
up changing the mainstream. When we celebrate big steps that were made
in the past, it reminds us that big steps can be made in the future."
Many of the steps Fairey refers to involve the advocacy of the working
class, put forth in the songs of Joe Strummer and Woody Guthrie and the
writings of Cornel West, and among the works of other heroes portrayed
in May Day. International Worker's Day celebrated in nearly 100
countries throughout the world, commemorates the 1886 Haymarket Massacre
in Chicago when a peaceful rally supporting workers on strike was
disrupted by a bomb, and then a barrage of police gunfire. Because of
negative sentiment surrounding the incident, U.S. President Grover
Cleveland decided it was best to avoid celebrating the day, but it is
precisely such sentiment that Fairey believes must be voiced: "It's a
day to express frustration with the powers that be, but also a day for
activists to pursue ideals." In May Day, he does both, with images
supporting free speech and bemoaning the U.S. two party political
system, pushing for renewable energy and critiquing corporate
propaganda.
In Fairey's mind, the persistence of difficulties across all of these
arenas—political, environmental, economic, cultural—points to that third
meaning of May Day: a distress signal. "By now we thought we would be
in post-Bush utopia, but we're still having to call attention to these
problems,” he remarks. Like any mayday call, however, the sounding of
the alarm also brings hope for help on the way. "If we stay silent,
there's no hope,” Fairey muses. "But if we make noise, if we put our
ideas out there, then maybe we can make a change like the people in the
portraits have done."
Shepard Fairey is the man behind OBEY GIANT, the graphics that have
changed the way people see art and the urban landscape. Fairey’s art
reached a new level of recognition in 2008, when his “HOPE” portrait of
Barack Obama became the iconic image of the presidential campaign and
helped inspire an unprecedented political movement. As Shepard Fairey’s
body of work reached its 20-year mark in 2009, the Institute of
Contemporary Art/Boston honored him with a full-scale solo
retrospective, which drew a record number of visitors for the museum.
Entitled Supply and Demand, the exhibition shares its name with Fairey’s
career-chronicling book, now in its second edition (Gingko Press). The
exhibition traveled to the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh and will
move to the Center for Contemporary Art in Cincinnati, on view through
August 22nd, 2010.
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