Chuck Sperry

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March 3, 2018 By squirt

Chuck Sperry in “Posters for Change – Tear, Paste, Protest” – a Collection of Removable Posters

Chuck Sperry’s political poster “Humanity” was selected to appear in  “Posters for Change – Tear, Paste, Protest: 50 Removable Posters” from Princeton Architectural Press.

“Posters for Change” is an important record of resistance, touching most of the political movements of today, including 50 beautifully reproduced, removable images from the world’s most relevant designers. This impressive book will be released on March 20, 2018; it can be pre-ordered through the publisher through this link – Posters for Change – Tear, Paste, Protest: 50 Removable Posters.

11 x 14 inches
Paperback, perforated pages
112 Pages
50 color illustrations
Publication date: March 20, 2018
$25.00

From The Guardian • March 3, 2018 • Kathryn Bromwich

As the night of Tuesday 8 November 2016 dragged into the early hours of Wednesday morning, people around the globe were readjusting their expectations for what the world would look like over the following four years. The 45th president of the United States would not be Hillary Rodham Clinton, as had been widely predicted, but Donald J Trump. The day after he was inaugurated, hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of Washington as part of the Women’s March; worldwide, millions attended hundreds of related marches. Since then, Trump’s presidency has been marked by protests.

“It all started with the election – we were like, ‘We need to do something,’” says Jennifer Lippert, editorial director at Princeton Architectural Press in New York. She spotted a blog post showing a sign in a window that said “Everyone Welcome Here” and this sparked an idea: PAP would put out a call for political posters and publish the best as a book, donating the proceeds to non-profit organizations.

“We didn’t want curse words in it, and we didn’t want it to be about Trump – we wanted it to be about the issues,” says Lippert. They received 800 submissions from around the world, covering topics such as climate change, civil rights, LGBTQ issues, healthcare, feminism and gun control. “In the last couple of years there’s been so much happening with protests. Since the election we’ve definitely seen more people engaged in the political environment,” says Lippert.

The 50 posters in the book were chosen on the strength of their graphic design, the clarity of their message and their ability to grab people’s attention. They are also detachable: “The whole point of the book was that they would be hung up – in windows, in shops, in dorm rooms, on front doors, in offices…”

Graphic design activism has a rich history, and when putting the book together, Lippert’s editorial team did extensive research into protest art going back to the 1960s. It found that although there is now much more computer-generated art, other techniques have remained the same – hand-drawn posters and collages are still among the most popular. And while there is now more focus on LGBTQ rights, many of the issues being discussed 50 years ago are still relevant – the environment, peace, equal rights. “It’s hard to think about things not getting better. But I feel like there are so many issues we still have to overcome that we’ve always had to overcome. The biggest, I think, is equality for everybody.”

Lippert remains hopeful: the recent rise in activism, she believes, is a promising sign for the future. “I think when you start taking things away from people – their right to speak out, equality – it sparks a change. People realise that they do have a voice and they need to use it, otherwise change will never happen. I think that’s what we’re seeing now.”

Posters for Change – Tear, Paste, Protest: 50 Removable Posters is published by Princeton Architectural Press on 20 March

Support important non-profit causes by acquiring more of Chuck Sperry’s posters at The Outrage, the official merchandising outlet of the Women’s March:

Sperry’s Women’s March Anniversary Poster 2018 • available here!

Sperry’s Women’s March Poster 2017 • available here!

Sperry’s March for Science 2017 • available here!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Chuck Sperry, civil rights, Climate Change, feminism, gun control, healthcare, LGBTQ issues, March For Science, Posters for Change Tear Paste Protest 50 Removable Posters, Princeton Architectural Press, The Guardian, Women's March

February 9, 2018 By squirt

Sperry to Exhibit at Art Karlsruhe, Germany

I am very pleased to announce I will exhibit my prints in Germany at the Art Karlsruhe art fair with Art Room Gallery of Konstanz, Germany on February 22 through 25, 2018.

The occasion for my showing in Germany: for the first time, Art Karlsruhe will be presenting a curated special show of editioned prints devoted to the fine art of printmaking, and I have been invited to show my work there.

Germany’s largest art fair, Art Karlsruhe focuses on Classic Modern art to the latest works of Contemporary art. This extraordinary fair attracts 200+ galleries from all over Germany and internationally. Located in a region of Germany known for art collecting and support for the visual arts, Art Karlsruhe attracts 50,000 visitors each year.

Over the years, the fair has developed a reputation as a strong proponent of German Expressionism, Impressionism, and Modern art. Artists such as Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel, Willi Baumeister, and Fred Thieler can be found there.

Art Room Gallery will feature a solo show of photography by Uwe Langmann. The gallery will be presenting a selection of art from Sebastian Wandl, Peintre X, Tabby, Sarah Jil Niklas, Mathias Pürthner and the San Francisco based artist Chuck Sperry.

Please join Art Room Gallery at the booth H1/S04

Art Karlsruhe 2018
Messe Karlsruhe
Messeallee 1
76287 Karlsruhe
Germany
February 22–25, 2018
Preview: February 21, 2018, 3 p.m.–9 p.m.

 

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: Art Karlsruhe, Art Room Gallery, Mathias Pürthner, Peintre X, Sarah Niklas, Sebastian Wandl, Tabby, Uwe Langmann

January 14, 2018 By squirt

“Women Rising” Poster for Women’s March 2018

“Women Rising” 2018
18 x 24
Offset Poster
Two-sided / two images
Signed and Numbered Edition of 200

Sold Out – Thank you!

_______________

Posters will be distributed in Las Vegas at:

Sam Boyd Stadium
Women’s March Merchandise
7000 East Russell Road
Las Vegas, NV

Posters will be distributed in Washington, DC at:

The Outrage
2439 18th Street NW
Washington, DC

I’ll be making a very limited online release of 200 signed and numbered offset Women’s March 2018 posters on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 at a random time.

Last year’s Women’s March 2017 poster is available HERE • The Outrage donates 100% of all sales of my poster to Planned Parenthood

__________________

“We’re exactly one week away from the anniversary of the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. On Sunday, January 21st, we’re gathering in Las Vegas for the official Women’s March Anniversary: Power to the Polls event kicking off our year-long campaign to win in 2018!” – Women’s March 2018

I am very proud to contribute my talents and many thousands of posters to the Women’s March January 21, 2018 in Las Vegas and Washington, DC.

My poster will be available through the official Women’s March merchandise and info point in Las Vegas and in Washington.

It is gratifying to continue in the committed efforts of the women’s movement by working closely with the The Outrage in Washington, DC. The Outrage donates 100% of all sales of my posters to worthy causes, and is working closely with Women’s March, NOW, She Should Run and others to leverage the November 2018 mid-term election and fight back for our future.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Chuck Sperry, Las Vegas, NOW, Planned Parenthood, She Should Run, The Outrage, Washington, Women's March

January 2, 2018 By squirt

2017 Year In Review: 25 Amazing Prints in ’17

 

Read More: Sperry’s beautiful new art book, “Helikon, The Muses of Chuck Sperry” (2017)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 311, Conscious Alliance, Dave Matthews, Demeter, Eleutheria, Erato, Greensky Bluegrass, Helikon, Jerry Garcia, Leftover Salmon, March For Science, Ostracon, Pretenders, Primus, Queens of the Stone Age, SFMOMA, String Cheese Incident, Supersuckers, SXSW, TRPS, Twiddle, Women's March

November 27, 2017 By squirt

Sperry’s New Art Print at Art Basel Miami / Context Art Fair with Spoke Art Gallery

The Ostracon by Chuck Sperry

The Ostracon, 2017
20 x 34
Edition of 150
7 colors on cream paper
Signed and Numbered
_______________

I will be making a very limited release of “The Ostracon” and it’s variants, my fourth and final Jerry Garcia portrait, with a very special book signing of “Helikon”  – Thursday, December 7, 2017 at 2 pm – through Spoke Art Gallery at Context Art Fair during Art Basel Miami.

Please visit us at Spoke Art Booth C133!

Read More: Sperry’s beautiful new art book, “Helikon, The Muses of Chuck Sperry” (2017)

_______________

Notes on “The Ostracon”

Ostrakon. (in ancient Greece) a potsherd, especially one used as a ballot on which the name of a person voted to be ostracized was inscribed.

“At any time, by a majority of votes written secretly upon potsherds (ostraka), the Assembly, in a quorum of six thousand members, might send into exile for ten years any man who in its judgement had become a danger to the state. In this way ambitious leaders would be stimulated to conduct themselves with circumspection and moderation, and men suspected of conspiracy could be disposed of without the law’s delay.”

— Will Durant, The Life of Greece, The Story of Civilization, Part II

While working on my book “Helikon” my work has been driven and inspired by the spirit of the ancient Greek muses and Greek mythology; Greek myths fill my art and my printmaking with theme and motif.

My creative roots are in the San Francisco poster movement which began in the utopian spirit of social experimentation in the Haight-Ashbury, where I live today. I look sometimes at my early rock poster work through be-mused glass; music was viewed as “therapy” by the Greeks. Confirmation that the ancients were well-attuned. Anyone who knows the rock concert experience as I do, knows rock fans feel this way still today.

Art for music concerts is a popular business, something with which the fine art world may be uncomfortable. In a democracy full of popular businesses, Art recently realizes it is also one. I hope my art serves as a democratizing influence in the sphere of fine art and in the culture at large.

Since the election of November 2016, I’ve refocussed on my political motivations, and I’ve aimed to make a social impact with my work. Following the popularity of my 2011 Occupy poster “This Is Our City, And We Can Shut It Down” I created a related typographic propaganda poster for the Women’s March of January 2017, “Resist Sexism, Racism, Xenophobia, Homophobia, Ignorance, Corruption and Hate.” 

I made another poster which became emblematic of the March for Science of April 22, 2017.

I was pleased to see that my March for Science posters reached the lectern of the demonstration where keynote speaker Bill Nye posed with NASA astronaut Leland Melvin alongside my poster image. My Women’s March poster and my Occupy poster were recognized by inclusion in the United States Library of Congress and in exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. It’s sincerely gratifying to receive  institutional recognition, but the pressing point is to open minds and to inspire participation in our democratic society.

Long ago as a teen I was packed off to college with Will and Ariel Durant’s eleven volume “Story of Civilization” by my enlightened parents who felt these books a necessary provision for well-rounded citizenship. I am always most drawn to volume 2, “The Life of Greece.” I re-read this book constantly.

The Will Durant passage above — which describes the ancient Greek institution of democratic ostracism — was part of my inspiration for my newest art print “The Ostracon.” His words describing ancient greek polity spark thoughts of a vibrant, if messy and flawed, democracy. Today’s news is filled with a similar vibrance and messiness: impeachment, investigations, and a series of scandalous banishments. American democracy has been going through unimaginable upheavals in the last year; ostracism is in the air.

In researching more deeply into ostracism, I encountered the words of august archeologist Professor John McK Camp II, Director of the Agora Excavations of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens and professor of classics at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland, Virginia. I contacted him to ask permission to attach his words to my art; he generously agreed. Prof. John Camp offers — in a spirit of openness and possibility — the concept of democratic ostracism as an interesting solution in this peculiar era of American democracy:

“The United States has borrowed lots from the ancient Greeks, including such bedrock items as architecture, the Olympics, coinage, theater, and, most important, the concept of democracy. Visitors to Athens can still view the official drinking cups and tableware used in the 5th century BC, when legislators were wined and dined at state expense. Not much, in fact, has changed since antiquity except the technology.

“One aspect of ancient political life has not been adopted, however, and perhaps it’s time to bring it back: ostracism. Once a year the Athenians would meet and vote on a simple question: Is anyone aiming at a tyranny, is anyone becoming a threat to the democracy? If a simple majority voted yes, then they dispersed and reassembled two months later. They brought with them their ostracon (a fragment of pottery), on which they had scratched the name of the person they thought represented a threat. The man with the most votes lost. He was exiled for 10 years, and this was thought to calm any anti-democratic leanings he might have.” 

— John McK Camp II,

(From “Ostracized in Athens,”  The New York Times, July 24, 2003 by permission of the author)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Art Basel, Art Basel Miami, Chuck Sperry, Context Art Fair, Helikon, Helikon The Muses of Chuck Sperry, Spoke Art

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About Chuck Sperry

Chuck Sperry lives in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, where he’s made his particular style of rock poster designs for over 20 years. He operates Hangar 18, a silkscreen print studio, located in Oakland. Learn More…

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Sperry Books: “Color x Color” • “Helikon” • “Chthoneon” • “Idyllion”

Latest Blog Posts

  • Chuck Sperry’s Danaïde Blotter EQL Release
  • AVAILABLE NOW: Sperry’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” Poster
  • “Chuck Sperry: Archetypes” Shows in Paris
  • “Archetypes” Chuck Sperry Store Release Open Now
  • Chuck Sperry’s “Archetypes” EQL Premiere Release May 1, 2026

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