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<channel>
	<title>Drew Tewksbury: Multimedia Journalist &#187; Art</title>
	<link>http://drewtewksbury.com</link>
	<description>A cornucopia of Drew Tewksbury's print, broadcast, and online content</description>
	<pubDate>Fri, 09 Apr 2010 07:52:13 +0000</pubDate>
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			<item>
		<title>Frohawk Two Feathers</title>
		<link>http://drewtewksbury.com/2009/07/01/frohawk-two-feathers/</link>
		<comments>http://drewtewksbury.com/2009/07/01/frohawk-two-feathers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2009 04:36:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Art]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Interviews]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[artists]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[brand x]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[frendland]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[frohawk two feathers]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[heather taylor]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[kent cyclone]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[lincoln heights]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[los angeles]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[taylor de cordoba]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[umar rashid]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Frohawk Two Feathers is a man at the nexus of many truths. He’s an alchemist of visual art who turns dull history into golden narratives rich with beautiful subversion and he’s a performance artist who experiments with music, poetry and alter egos. Then there’s Umar Rashid, the mastermind behind it all.


Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/12/04/pray-the-devil-back-to-hell/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Pray the Devil Back to Hell'>Pray the Devil Back to Hell</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/02/24/dissecting-the-candidates-graphics-with-shepard-fairey/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Dissecting the Candidates&#8217; Graphics With Shepard Fairey'>Dissecting the Candidates&#8217; Graphics With Shepard Fairey</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/09/09/brand-upon-the-brain/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Brand Upon the Brain'>Brand Upon the Brain</a></li></ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="captionright"><a href="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/frohawk_latest.png" title="frohawk two feathers"><img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/frohawk_latest.png" alt="frohawk two feathers" /></a></p>
<p><span style="float: left; color: #990033; font-size: 60px; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 9px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">F</span>rohawk Two Feathers is a man at the nexus of many truths. On one hand, he’s an alchemist of visual art who turns dull history into golden narratives rich with beautiful subversion. On the other, he’s a performance artist who experiments with music, poetry and alter egos, including the psychedelic sexpot Kent Cyclone. Then there’s Umar Rashid, the mastermind behind it all who percolates the creativity that keeps his many artistic endeavors running.As a visual artist, the Lincoln Heights resident creates evocative illustrations and paintings of fictional aristocrats that take stylistic cues from post-colonial era portraiture. These colorful works &#8212; which glean the outsider-art aesthetic of murals and public art &#8212; explore the intricacies of race, the malleability of class and the fragility of how history is constructed. Although his characters are fictional &#8212; some are absurd inhabitants of the imagined country of Frengland &#8212; they are abstractions of a real ruling class that present a visual dialogue between the oppressor and the oppressed.</p>
<p>&#8220;He is constantly redefining himself and therefore redefining the traditional idea of the artist as someone who makes work solely to be exhibited,&#8221; says Heather Taylor of Taylor De Cordoba, the gallery exhibiting his work in 2010. &#8220;His whole life is really his art.&#8221;</p>
<p>Whether he’s challenging expectations with his personas or rewriting history in his paintings, Frohawk embodies the peripatetic Los Angeles art scene, where genre-obliteration reigns supreme and one medium is never seems enough.</p>
<p><strong>Brand X: What’s the meaning behind ‘Frengland’ and the revisionist history you present in your illustrations and paintings?</strong><br />
<a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef01157026ec20970c-pi" style="float: left"><img src="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef01157026ec20970c-800wi" alt="Frohawk_painting" class="at-xid-6a00d8341c630a53ef01157026ec20970c" style="margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px" title="Frohawk_painting" border="0" /></a> Umar Rashid: Frengland is a place I created that presupposes that 18th century England and France never were at war with each other and that they merged into one huge, unstoppable colonial empire. Imagine all the countries they conquered put together. They’d put a flag in most of the world. [For a recent New York show] I made 10 large portraits of people directly and indirectly involved in the 50 Years War (1742-1790), between Frengland of Francis III and numerous belligerents.</p>
<p><strong>Brand X: How would America fit into this picture? We’d never colonize like that, right?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Rashid:</strong> Ha. Yeah. Let’s not even talk about Iraq.</p>
<p><strong>Brand X: You also keep a menagerie of personas. There’s Kent Cyclone, the saucy nouveau-griot who spouts truth on Silver Lake stages. Then there’s your &#8220;Friday Night&#8221; concept album, which extols the activity of a night on the town. Sometimes actors and performance artists can feel spread too thin by having multiple identities. In what ways have you experienced a loss or complication of your own identity?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Rashid</strong>: My father was an actor, so I grew accustomed to seeing him as many different people. I would see him fall in love or die on stage over and over again. It put the seed in my head. But sometimes I feel a little spread thin. I’ve been out around town and someone will yell, &#8220;Hey, Frohawk!&#8221; at me, and it’s at that moment that I, Umar, have to reconcile with it.</p>
<p><strong>Brand X: Music plays an important role in your personas. What are you experimenting with now?</strong></p>
<p><strong>Rashid:</strong> I’m writing a treatment for a folk album I’m working on with an old friend, tentatively titled &#8220;Crocodile Company.&#8221; It’s about a Frenglish soldier in the Compagnie Crocodile who comes back to his island homeland after years of wars to find his town overrun with brigands and his sister kidnapped. He is then elected by the townspeople to exact Rambo-style revenge on the thugs.</p>
<p><strong>Brand X: You’re pretty busy &#8212; and you and your wife have a kid on the way too.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Rashid:</strong> Soon you’ll see a golden light coming from Lincoln Heights. That means I’ve become a dad.</p>
<p><strong><strong>Brand X: Your greatest work of art?</strong></strong></p>
<p><strong><strong>Rashid:</strong> For sure.</strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Photo credit: Colin Young-Wolff / For The Times.<br />
Painting, titled &#8220;Amir&#8221; of Sakamoto, Daigoro, Japanese Ambassador to Frenglish Occupied Ottoma and Leader of the Clandestine Yellow Dragon Society, Istanbul, by Frohawk Two Feathers. Courtesy Taylor De Cordoba.</em></strong></p>
<p align="right"><strong>By <a href="http://www.drewtewksbury.com" target="_blank">Drew Tewksbury</a></strong></p>
<p align="right"><strong>from <a href="http://www.thisisbrandx.com/2009/06/multifaceted-artist-frohawk-two-feathers-innovators-09.html">L.A. Times&#8217; magazine Brand X Innovators 2009 issue</a></strong></p>
<p><span style="float: right; color: #990033; font-size: 100px; line-height: 1px; padding-top: 1px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia"><strong>*</strong></span></p>
<p><strong><img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/for-your-perusal.png" alt="for-your-perusal.png" /><br />
<br />
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<p>Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/12/04/pray-the-devil-back-to-hell/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Pray the Devil Back to Hell'>Pray the Devil Back to Hell</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/02/24/dissecting-the-candidates-graphics-with-shepard-fairey/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Dissecting the Candidates&#8217; Graphics With Shepard Fairey'>Dissecting the Candidates&#8217; Graphics With Shepard Fairey</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/09/09/brand-upon-the-brain/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Brand Upon the Brain'>Brand Upon the Brain</a></li></ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Museum of Jurassic Technology</title>
		<link>http://drewtewksbury.com/2009/01/13/the-museum-of-jurassic-technology/</link>
		<comments>http://drewtewksbury.com/2009/01/13/the-museum-of-jurassic-technology/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jan 2009 00:10:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Drew Tewksbury</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Art]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[athanasius kircher]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[culver city]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[david wilson]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[laika]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[los angeles]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[museum of jurassic technology]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[wondercabinets]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[wunderkammer]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Visitors Fall Down the Rabbit Hole at this Los Angeles Anti-Institution: A look at the inimitable people who breathe their art and soul into the museum's mindbending collection of curios. 


Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2010/02/11/yeasayer-and-warpaint-besiege-the-natural-history-museum/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Yeasayer and Warpaint Besiege the Natural History Museum'>Yeasayer and Warpaint Besiege the Natural History Museum</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/02/19/ryan-gosling/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Ryan Gosling'>Ryan Gosling</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/05/07/interview-voxhaul-broadcast/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Interview: Voxhaul Broadcast'>Interview: Voxhaul Broadcast</a></li></ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/rachel-mjt.jpg" alt="Museum of Jurassic Technology Photos By Ryan Schude" align="absmiddle" height="503" width="753" /><br />
<span style="float: right; color: #34282c; font-size: 10px; line-height: 1px; padding-top: 1px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">Rachel Portenstein in Garden of Eden On Wheels / Photo by <a href="http://www.ryanschude.com/" title="Ryan Schude Photography" target="_blank">Ryan Schude</a></span><br />
-<br />
<span style="float: left; color: #990033; font-size: 63px; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 23px; padding-right: 10px; padding-left: 10px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">O</span>n November 3, 1953, as Soviet scientists pulled the leather straps tightly around her body, slipped her legs and tail into the body sheath, and affixed the clear plastic helmet and black breathing tubes to her muzzle, Laika could have never known that she was about to be sacrificed to space. Laika, a butterscotch brown mutt, was launched into orbit on Sputnik 2, as the first living creature to leave the Earth’s atmosphere.</p>
<p>Laika was brought to the English-speaking world in a 1953 article in the New York Times. “Moscow Radio last week announced that an animal-carrying satellite soon would be launched… The radio audience was introduced to a ‘small, shaggy dog named Kudryavka,’ which barked into the microphone.” A few days after, Laika—Kudryavka’s nickname, which translates to “barker”—was placed into a small spacecraft.</p>
<p>For Laika, it was to be a one-way flight. Soviet scientists said they poisoned her last ration of food so that she would simply fall asleep instead of starving. (It was later revealed that Laika probably did not live past the lift-off stage.) In 1998, Oleg Gazenko, the scientist who pulled the stray from the Moscow streets, reflected on his experience: “The more time passes, the more I’m sorry about it. We shouldn’t have done it. We did not learn enough from the mission to justify the death of the dog.”</p>
<p><a href="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/mjt_00135.jpg" title="Museum of Jurassic Technology" target="_blank"><img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/mjt_00135.jpg" alt="Museum of Jurassic Technology Photo by Ryan Schude" align="middle" height="503" width="753" /></a><br />
<span style="float: right; color: #34282c; font-size: 10px; line-height: 1px; padding-top: 1px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">Anitra Menning / Photo by <a href="http://www.ryanschude.com/" title="Ryan Schude Photography" target="_blank">Ryan Schude</a></span><br />
-<br />
<span style="float: left; color: #990033; font-size: 63px; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 23px; padding-right: 10px; padding-left: 10px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">I</span>n a darkened room at the Museum of Jurassic Technology, Laika’s portrait stands alone. Framed and oil-painted, it hangs in an exhibition room that toes the line between Victorian salon and Old West funeral parlor. Titled “Lives of Perfect Creatures: Dogs of the Soviet Space Program,” the exhibit displays 10 paintings as a tribute to the dogs used in prototypic space flight.</p>
<p>Housed in an unassuming building in the Los Angeles enclave of Culver City, the Museum of Jurassic Technology challenges the traditional museum. Instead of acting as a source of knowledge, the museum raises more questions than answers: Is it a repository for the obscure, the ephemeral and the unfathomable, encapsulated in a post-modern Victorian salon of the 21st century? Or is it an experiment in the paradoxical and the sublimely wondrous? Perhaps.</p>
<p><a href="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/mjt_00081.jpg" title="Photo by Ryan Schude"><img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/mjt_00081.jpg" alt="Photo by Ryan Schude" height="461" width="308" /></a></p>
<p><span style="float: left; color: #990033; font-size: 63px; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 23px; padding-right: 10px; padding-left: 10px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">I</span>f you’re not looking, you may miss it. The strip-mall flotsam of Los Angeles urban sprawl—an In-N-Out Burger, Blockbuster Video and India Sweets &amp; Spices—camouflages the anonymous facade of the museum. From the street, there is little evidence of the museum’s existence; people waiting for the bus turn their backs to the museum’s crimson-and-gold sign. There is nothing extraordinary about it. But inside, the exhibits are as mysterious as the museum’s name. Instead of dinosaur bones, the dark, byzantine halls of the museum display bizarre collections. Often referred to as a cabinet of curiosity, the museum lies somewhere between artistic and historical, narrative and interpretative, and the false and the real.</p>
<p>Around the corner from the gift shop, an automated slide show explains the history of museums. An anonymous voice—the same anonymous voice speaking from museum headsets around the world—calls Noah’s ark the first natural history museum, follows the lineage to the wunderkammers (wonder cabinets) of Renaissance Europe, and culminates with the stodgy institutions of today. The Museum of Jurassic Technology marries the details of established institutions—the placards, carefully lit displays, dioramas—with the mystique of P.T. Barnum’s collection of curios, or maybe a Coney Island freak show.</p>
<p>One room is dedicated to artifacts culled from Los Angeles mobile-home parks, where dioramas depict different trailers in small synthetic habitats. “Tell the Bees: Belief, Knowledge &amp; Hypersymbolic Cognition” displays folk remedies from a prescience America committed to the transformative powers of mice on toast and sewing pins stuck into wooden cemetery gates. “The Eye of the Needle: The Unique World of Microminiatures of Hagop Sandaldjian” showcases nearly invisible sculptures—only visible by microscope—by the Egyptian ex-pat Sandaldjian.</p>
<p>On the second floor, just adjacent to Laika and her Soviet comrades, the 29-year-old Georgian ex-pat Nanuka Tchitchou sits in the tearoom with her ghostlike Windhound, Tula. Nana, as she likes to be called, serves tea from a 100-year-old samovar, a large coal-heated teapot. She uses only Georgian black tea, which she smuggles back from her home country. Nana and the tearoom complete an interpretive arc that starts with the space dogs and Borzoi Cabinet Theatre, which screens films of slow-motion Soviet rocket launches,and ends in a hot glass of tea with lemon. Nana says she does feel like a part of the museum, and that her tearoom is a place for introspection. “Here, tea always opens up a conversation,” she says.<br />
<img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/nana.jpg" alt="Photo By Ryan Schude" align="middle" height="503" width="753" /><br />
<span style="float: right; color: #34282c; font-size: 10px; line-height: 1px; padding-top: 1px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">Nana Tchitchou in the Tula Tea Room / Photo by <a href="http://www.ryanschude.com/" title="Ryan Schude Photography" target="_blank">Ryan Schude</a>   </span><br />
-<br />
<span style="float: left; color: #990033; font-size: 63px; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 23px; padding-right: 10px; padding-left: 10px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">T</span>he museum is held together by the vision and commitment of a group of artists who breathe their dreams and passions into the collection. “This is one of the only places in the world where you’re not told what to think,” Rachel Portenstein, the commemorative objects curator, says. She puts her hand into a small bowl of water, fishes out a piece of adhesive plastic, and adheres it to a ceramic bowl that will soon be placed into a kiln. She sits on a high stool, surrounded by various ceramics and eclectic ephemera that have collected on the shelves in the museum’s back rooms. Behind her is a plastic model of a Russian rocket; to her right a plaster skull. Whereas the interior of the museum is strictly controlled with theatrical lighting and thick curtains, the private backrooms reveal the parts that keep the museum alive.</p>
<p>Sometimes the museum’s founder, David Wilson, with his white hair and horn-rimmed glasses, will emerge from a storage room still painted green from its time as a coroner’s office. Wilson studied film at CalArts in the 1970s, and his mastery of lighting and optical illusion appear in the Athanasius Kircher exhibit, which displays the ideas of the 17th-century Jesuit thinker. Through a viewing apparatus, holograms appear inside each ornately constructed environment, revealing an image that was previously invisible.</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>&#8220;The learner must be led always from familiar objects toward the unfamiliar - guided along, as it were, a chain of flowers into the mysteries of life&#8221;<br />
- Charles Willson Peale</strong></p></blockquote>
<p>Like the Kircher exhibit, the museum began as collection of Wilson’s ideas. Founded in 1989, the museum grew as enthusiasts donated their collections and expertise to Wilson. In 1995, writer Lawrence Weschler wrote the book Mr. Wilson’s Cabinet of Wonder, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, which brought the museum to the public’s attention. In 2001, Wilson won a MacArthur grant, more commonly known as a “genius grant.”</p>
<p>For those who tend to the museum, the answers still don’t come easy. Since she started at the museum in 2001, finance and  development director Anitra Menning says that her view of the museum has changed. It is an ever-evolving piece of conceptual art, she says, and somewhere between Laika’s portrait, mice on toast, and even Nana and Tula in the tearoom, the museum forever orbits the outer edge of the ordinary, challenging the way we perceive the world. “Lately, I have been thinking about the motto of the museum,” she says. “It states, ‘The learner must be led always from familiar objects toward the unfamiliar; guided along, as it were, a chain of flowers into the mysteries of life.’ Here you’re not forced, but you’re guided along. This has made me think a lot about the additive nature of learning and how learning is like a house of cards. To build the house of cards, you always have to find a card to lean against.”<br />
<span style="float: right; color: #990033; font-size: 100px; line-height: 90px; padding-top: 1px; font-family: Times,serif,Georgia">*</span><br />
By Drew Tewksbury / Photos by <a href="http://www.ryanschude.com/" title="Ryan Schude Photography" target="_blank">Ryan Schude</a></p>
<p>Published <a href="http://swindlemagazine.com/issue19/" title="Swindle Magazine" target="_blank">Swindle Magazine</a>, Issue 19, Jan. 2009<br />
<br />
<img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/for-your-perusal.png" alt="for-your-perusal.png" /><br />
<br />
<img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/swindle_magazine_cover.jpg" alt="Swindle Magazine - Issue 19" align="right" height="299" width="250" /><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.mjt.org" title="Museum of Jurassic Technology" target="_blank">Museum of Jurassic Technology Website</a></p>
<p><a href="http://soundportraits.org/on-air/museum_of_jurassic_technology/" title="Sound Portrait Museum of Jurassic Technology" target="_blank">Lawrennce Weschler&#8217;s NPR Sound<br />
Portrait of the MJT and David Wilson</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08661a.htm" title="Anathanasius Kircher" target="_blank">Athanasius Kircher </a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/partners/aol/special/sputnik/sput-17.html">New York Times Article on Laika&#8217;s<br />
space flight, from November 3, 1957</a></p>
<p><a href="http://nanuka.com/" title="Nanuka Tchitchou's arwork" target="_blank">Nanuka Tchitchou&#8217;s artwork<br />
</a></p>


<p>Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2010/02/11/yeasayer-and-warpaint-besiege-the-natural-history-museum/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Yeasayer and Warpaint Besiege the Natural History Museum'>Yeasayer and Warpaint Besiege the Natural History Museum</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/02/19/ryan-gosling/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Ryan Gosling'>Ryan Gosling</a></li><li><a href='http://drewtewksbury.com/2008/05/07/interview-voxhaul-broadcast/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Interview: Voxhaul Broadcast'>Interview: Voxhaul Broadcast</a></li></ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Prada Marfa</title>
		<link>http://drewtewksbury.com/2007/06/23/prada-marfa/</link>
		<comments>http://drewtewksbury.com/2007/06/23/prada-marfa/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 23 Jun 2007 17:01:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Drew Tewksbury</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Art]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[flaunt magazine]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[ingar Dragset]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[marfa]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[michael Elmgreen]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[prada]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ 
 Prada Marfa
Alongside a desolate stretch of highway outside the small Texas town of Marfa (pop. 2,121), a solitary white monolith emerges from the desert sand emblazoned with the most powerful word the world has ever known: Prada. Created in 2005 by Berlin-based artists Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset, Prada Marfa is sculptural reconstruction [...]


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <img src="http://drewtewksbury.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/uzzle_prada.jpg" alt="Prada Mara" /><br />
<strong> Prada Marfa</strong><br />
Alongside a desolate stretch of highway outside the small Texas town of Marfa (pop. 2,121), a solitary white monolith emerges from the desert sand emblazoned with the most powerful word the world has ever known: Prada. Created in 2005 by Berlin-based artists Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset, Prada Marfa is sculptural reconstruction of a Prada store, complete with actual Prada shoes and bags from the Fall 2005 collection displayed in the window.  Yet, there is no working door, leaving the viewer as a perpetual window-shopper. Now Prada Marfa is essentially a minimalist sculpture paying homage to the town of Marfa, Texas—once home to revolutionary minimalist artist Donald Judd—while documenting a fleeting moment in the ephemeral tastes of fashion, forever as unattainable fetishized items of desire.<br />
-Drew Tewksbury</p>
<p>(Flaunt Magazine 2007)</p>


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