Chuck Sperry

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April 27, 2024 By squirt

“Chuck Sperry’s Long and Multi-faceted Career” – Juxtapoz

Juxtapoz • April 26, 2024 • by Katherine Hamilton

It may surprise those who are familiar with artist Chuck Sperry’s long and multifaceted career that the man is, in fact, just one man. From art shows to key-note speeches to making some of the most iconic rock posters of his time, Sperry’s prolific output seems like the work of many hands—and it is, in a way, as the artist has embraced collaboration his entire career. For Sperry’s latest solo exhibition with Harman Projects in New York City, Only Human, the Oakland-based artist turns inward, inspired by the faults and powers being human can give us.

Before his solo exhibition opened in NYC, Sperry caught up with Harman Projects to discuss his political activism, his muse series, and what he loves about being human.

Harman Projects: Chuck, you’re best known for your psychedelic rock music posters, especially the “muses” series—some of which are on view right now at Harman Projects in NYC. I actually want to start by asking you about your more political work. You’ve been involved in many social movements, specifically ones against United States imperialism, emboldening the power of the people. Have you always considered your work to be political, or yourself to be a political artist?
Chuck Sperry: I have always considered my work to be political and accessible. I’ve focused my art to appeal to the broad general public. I make art for regular folks like us; I share my audience’s ideals, aspirations, and goals. My consciousness is that of a working stiff, and I never forget it. It is my hands and labor that brought me here—where I am now. And if I achieve some great or rare accomplishment, I try to do so humbly, remembering everything good comes with hard work.

Photo: Shaun Roberts

I also remember you saying you took inspiration from the French Situationist posters of May 1968 demonstrations and fellow Oakland artist Emory Douglas who made work for the Black Panthers from 1967-1980.
I had the distinct honor to work with Emory Douglas on projects and reprints of his classic Black Panther images. He gave me permission to reprint three of his amazing Black Panther Party newspaper designs in large format color screen prints on cotton rag paper as art prints. These were sold at Lazarides in the UK, and at Spoke Art in San Francisco way back when Ken Harman and I met. I hooked him up with Emory right away.

I “opened” for Emory at a gigantic design conference called Trimarchi in Mar del Plata (near Buenos Aires) Argentina. Our powerpoint lectures were in a basketball stadium. The place held 5000-6000 people in the audience. It took a fair amount of willpower for me to take the stage in front of that many people. At any rate, my lecture covered the history of concert posters and counter-culture that led from the psychedelic sixties to the present. After me, Emory headlined, starting off with a resounding: “Power to the People!” His lecture was very inspiring and brought many to tears.

Emory is the real deal. Me, I’m more in the entertainment space. But building the bridge between those two worlds—activism and entertainment—serves a function. I love to do that.

A few years ago I met Alexandre D’Huy, a French artist who invited me to the École National Supérieure des Beaux-arts in Paris to print a punk rock poster I designed for a French group called Operation S. The studio I printed in was the Atelier Populaire where Guy Debord and the Situationiste collective printed all their classic activist posters during the student strike in solidarity with the unions in May 1968. I used the same press! A perfect mix of music and activism on hallowed ground.

What an experience! It seems the music culture you often made posters for was never totally disconnected from these political movements.
I don’t really see any difference between politics and music. When a singer brings everyone together and makes their heart sing as one, it is a political act. To do so for the right cause is excellent, even better. For instance, the Power to the Peaceful events in Golden Gate Park organized by Michael Franti was a great melding of music and politics. Michael brought thousands of people out to Golden Gate Park to see a show, and invited all sorts of political action groups to the event to educate everybody. The Power to the Peaceful shows were quintessentially San Francisco at its finest.

Speaking of music, your work will be featured in the SFMOMA exhibition Art of Noise, an expansive museum exhibition examining music-centered design in San Francisco’s booming era of counterculture in the 1960s and 1970s. You and your work were instrumental in creating the visual culture of an entire era defined by music and gathering.
I’m incredibly grateful to be included in the Art of Noise exhibition at SFMOMA, which will run May 4 to August 18, 2024. With Art of Noise I’ll have a selection of my concert posters enter the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. It’s a dream come true! Many thanks to museum curator Joseph Becker, who took time to discuss the exhibition at length, make a visit to my studio in Oakland, and refine the print selections to very solid pieces to be shown and permanently collected. I bet you’re dying to know which ones. I’ll leave that as a surprise for those who support the museum and buy tickets to the event. It will knock your socks off, and I’m in great company.

“The Black Keys, Outside Lands” SFMOMA selection of Sperry concert poster for its permanent collection

When you look back at your career, what are three moments—maybe forks in the road—that pushed you into the career you’ve had?
I would put moving to New York City high on the list as an important juncture. I lived on the Lower East Side right in the wake of the Art Boom of the 1980s. There, I met Seth Tobocman and Peter Kuper and all the editors of World War 3 Illustrated, America’s longest running political comic book. Those encounters brought me into contact with so many legends and luminaries, both artistic and political. Living in New York City as a fledgling artist made me reach higher, run faster.

Moving out of New York City and relocating to San Francisco was the smartest thing I ever did. I formed an artistic game plan in San Francisco: I took up with all the underground cartoonist legends of the West Coast; I started printing screen prints with Ron Donovan and Orion Landau. Together, we formed a print studio called Psychic Sparkplug, making posters for great bands at great clubs: Trocadero, Slims, Covered Wagon, Golden West (Albuquerque, NM) and Jabberjaw (Los Angeles, CA). We made a bunch of rowdy screen printed posters for amazing music in short order. It was a blast! We used to regularly bowl with Frank Kozik and a number of rock bands and record label folks. The San Francisco scene blenderized art and music with a dash of booze.

Striking off on my own, being a solo act so to speak, was perhaps my third “fork” moment. Being able to call my own shots really made my decisions more rational and straightforward. By doing that, I was able to forge my own associations with galleries, musicians, and other artists, and to collaborate effectively. I met Ken Harman during this time. His support and guidance has brought my art to amazing heights. Meanwhile, it has been up to me to raise my game, dig in deeper to my subject matter, and fill out the details of my artistic vision.

On the road to discovering the dimensions of my artistic vision, I produced three art books: Helikon, Chthoneon, and Idyllion—and one gigantic 752 page poster book that covers my entire artistic path: Color x Color: The Sperry Poster Archive 1980-2020. Seeing where I’ve been helps me to plot out the next fork in the road.

SPERRY’S BOOKS AVAILABLE HERE

I want to ask about your influences. I read somewhere that you align your poster works with the styles of artists from the Vienna Secession and Art Nouveau movements. How do you feel these movements intersect with Psychedelic art?
The Vienna Secession and Art Nouveau brought art out of elitist settings, moving art and art objects into peoples’ lives. It was a part of the beginning of the process of democratization in the arts. Industrial arts and crafts were brought into the artistic sphere, and could be used as artistic mediums to express oneself. These ideas were consciously re-evaluated by the radical artists and social experimenters of the 1960s, like [music promoter] Chet Helms. Helms deeply appreciated Art Nouveau and its populist power, and through his aesthetic interests opened artists to create psychedelic poster art of the 1960’s.

These same democratic threads of thinking and social movement appear to me to have most recently expressed itself through Urban art. I love that my work is often categorized as contemporary Urban art, although usually I resist categories and prefer instead to keep working towards my own star.

You’ve been working through the Muse theme for quite some time. What refreshes your interest in it through each design?
I am a very stubborn person, to be honest, so that’s one reason I’ve stuck to this theme. When I started I never thought it was possible to make so much headway into such vast territory. The theme is incredibly rich, the territory is vast. Technically, I find refinements, new color combinations and printing techniques I can make in the next piece, each time I make one.

It’s a circle, like a bar of improvisational music that returns to the top richer and more focused. And that is why I stay with it. It brings me so much discovery, always! I’ve found that my dealing with mythological material for so long, and keeping much of it loosely structured around the Orphic Hymns, I’ve discovered a lot about myself through it. It brought me a lot of personal insight that has changed my life for the better.

You’ve also mentioned that as you’ve done this series, you’ve gone deeper and deeper into Greek Mythology. Has this influence been applied in non-Muse works? Or are you being strict with yourself and keeping it to this single series?
The ancient beliefs are pretty much pervasive in my life and art, and it has spilled over into every sphere. Strict? No, I am drawn towards freedom, not stricture. I try to remember that freedom brings its own responsibilities and concerns. For instance: I bought a house in the South of France in 2019. Bold, free move, right? But it’s a house [laughs] so that freedom comes with house-sized responsibilities. I like to say I “adult” in two languages.

Okay, but here’s the influenced-by-myths part. It’s in the South of France, which has Greek and Roman ruins everywhere. There’s a footpath behind the place that has to be ancient. The woods hold a mystery as though there are dryads and nymphs living there. Now, I grow and tend olives. There’s laurel and grapevines and figs. In a way, I’m living inside those ancient stories on the Mediterranean and pulled into those rhythms of life, which I only used to read about.

At any rate, myths are pretty blurry stories to begin with. They all have various tellings. Different versions come from regional or historical differences. Some versions are an amalgam of cultures. Isn’t that complexity so recognizably contemporary in respect to truth? The more you bear down on the facts, the more elusive reality becomes. It’s very quantum or fractal disposition. I find more and more that I am certain of less and less. That said, I always focus on the progressive and contemporary resonances in these stories, and think there is much of value to contemporary thinkers in progressive movements.

Have you noticed any narrative or stylistic arcs looking back at your career? I.e. where you’ve been versus where you’ve landed?
Long ago I was obsessed with trash culture. The arc has been to shift my attention towards more universal themes. I’m concerned with the collective unconscious and its expression and projection into the rituals of daily life or into the appearance of things. My earlier interest in trash culture was an interest in its relationship to those unconscious archetypes. Now, I like to imagine those archetypes in and of themselves. Archetypes are projected upon my mind in human form, I suppose, because I’m only human.

Studio visit with Chuck Sperry at Hangar 18 in Oakland, CA.

I know you’ve experimented with other mediums through your long career, but often returning to silk screen. After all these years, why have you stuck with screen printing over other printing mediums?
I’m excited by screen printing! It’s a joy to go to work. My studio is a big playground full of all the toys it has taken a lifetime to gather. Photographically exposing screens from film is a magical chemical and physical process. Printing and layering and mixing inks is alchemy at its finest. Using my hands. Interfacing with the paper and the result of layering the inks. All of it is sweet music. I’m a very lucky artist. I’m forever grateful to have this life dedicated to making beautiful things and sharing beautiful ideas with people.

What inspired the title of your latest exhibition with Harman Projects, Only Human?
I was inspired by an acknowledgement of my limitations—that I’m only human, mortal and fallible. Only Human refers to my commitment to craft and manual art production in tangible media. The idea behind Only Human is to show the way forward in the 21st Century: that art made by humans for humans in physical reality is imbued with the soul of our humanity, our uniquely mortal heart and immortal spirit, drawn from our human culture. Our human collective unconscious and experience will transcend the current imperative for non-human and virtual intervention in the art space.

Such art delights the gods, and perhaps will delight you too. I hope so.

Only Human is on view through Saturday, May 4th at Harman Projects, 210 Rivington Street New York, NY. Studio portraits by Shaun Roberts.

Filed Under: Press & Reviews Tagged With: Chuck Sperry, Harman Projects, Juxtapoz

January 31, 2019 By squirt

Chuck Sperry x Pangea Seed: “The Diver” Art Print

Chuck-Sperry-Pangea-Seed

The Diver 2019
16 x 35
Edition of 125
7 colors on cream paper
Signed and Numbered
_______________
Chuck-Sperry-Pangea-Seed
The Diver 2019
16 x 35
Silver Edition of 25
7 colors on silver metallic paper
Signed and Numbered
_______________
Chuck-Sperry-Pangea-Seed
The Diver 2019
16 x 35
Gold Edition of 25
7 colors on gold metallic paper
Signed and Numbered
_______________
PangeaSeed Foundation and artist Chuck Sperry are pleased to announce – a fine art print to help save our seas. This limited edition will be released Thursday, February 7, 2019 at 12pm PST via shop.PangeaSeed.org – limit one print per household.
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My print for PangeaSeed Foundation, “The Diver”, is a celebration of the beauty of the ocean environment and our inter-connected place in it.We are oxygen breathing animals, and we live on land. “The Diver” is leaving her natural habitat to enter a watery world, where she can not survive long for lack of air; there she is surrounded by the beauty and danger of the seas. She is also surrounded by the essence of her life on land.

“The Diver” plunges into the beautiful ocean surrounded by myriad air bubbles. Our ocean environment plays a crucial role in the generation of the majority of Earth’s life-sustaining air. We could not live on land and breathe fresh air without the world’s oceans. 70% of Earth’s oxygen comes from marine plants in our ocean environments. Heat driven loss of ocean oxygen is one of the leading threats to the delicate world biome posed by Climate Change.

It’s clearly time to act. Please be mindful and give your care to the environment. It’s time to do what you can to become a good steward of the environment. I am always happy to contribute my time and energy to PangeaSeed Foundation! Their efforts in helping to save the oceans, thru art and activism, deserve our support and good energies!

I noted in the credit line of my poster: “After Alfred Roller.” The figure of the diver in my print is influenced by a figure in the work of Vienna Secessionist artist Alfred Roller, the brilliant early 20th Century graphic stylist and inventor of the free, flowing typographical fonts that inspired artist Wes Wilson to create psychedelic lettering in the 1960’s.

Read more about the role oceans play in creating the air we breathe:
When a Killer Climate Catastrophe Struck the World’s Oceans

And visit PangeaSeed.org to learn how you can help save our oceans.
_______________

Filed Under: Art Prints Tagged With: Alfred Roller, Chuck Sperry, Climate Change, Pangea Seed, Vienna Secession, Wes Wilson

June 23, 2018 By squirt

Chuck Sperry Solo Museum Exhibition at Fort Wayne Museum of Art in September

Chuck Sperry Fort Wayne Museum of Art

All Access: Exploring Humanism in the Art of Chuck Sperry

September 15 – December 9, 2018

The Fort Wayne Museum of Art is pleased to celebrate Chuck Sperry’s first solo museum exhibition. Sperry has been preeminent in the rock poster genre since the late 1990s and has largely defined the genre in each decade since with his distinctive style and masterful printing technique.

Sperry has drawn inspiration for this work from the classical Greco-Roman idea of the muses, and their metaphorical home on Mount Helikon — the source of inspiration for all things art and music. Naiads, nymphs and muses in their richly patterned floral settings make their way into Sperry’s work. Dripping with brightly colored flowers, decked in gold and silver textures, Sperry’s blue-silver muses sing a paean to the long tradition of humanism reactivated in the struggle for social progress, universal human rights, a more perfect democracy and the utopian ideals of the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of San Francisco where Sperry has made his home since 1989.

Symbolism, Secession, ukiyo-e, and psychedelia blend in Sperry’s flattened, post-modern figurative art: all potent ingredients Sperry strives self-consciously to re-evaluate for the 21st Century.

The exhibit will feature 2 large scale tapestries designed by Sperry, 25 screen prints on oak panel, original ink drawings, and ephemeral color progressives which illuminate Sperry’s unique printing process.

There will be several new wood panel editions, and two new paper editions with variant editions available to acquire.

I will be releasing “Chthoneon, The Art of Chuck Sperry” the 136 page follow up of my art book “Helikon, The Muses of Chuck Sperry”. 

This exhibition is organized by the Fort Wayne Museum of Art and its Curator of Contemporary Art Josef Zimmerman.

______________________________________

Exhibition Opening Party: September 14, 6-9pm

Celebrate opening weekend of this exhibit and Litmus Test: Works on Paper from the Psychedelic Era with live music, cash bar, appetizers, and face time with the one and only Chuck Sperry!

Printmaking Workshop 1 with Chuck Sperry: September 15, 1:30pm • SOLD OUT

Learn from the singular figure of psychedelic poster printmaking Chuck Sperry with a hand-on workshop. Pre-registration with fee of $30 is required. Fee includes all supplies and your take-home creation.

Printmaking Workshop 2 with Chuck Sperry: September 15, 3:30pm • SOLD OUT

Learn from the singular figure of psychedelic poster printmaking Chuck Sperry with a hand-on workshop. Pre-registration with fee of $30 is required. Fee includes all supplies and your take-home creation.

Curator’s Tour: November 1, 12:15-1pm
Curator of Contemporary Art Josef Zimmerman will lead you on an engaging tour of this exhibit. From specialized and personal points of view, curators offer unique perspectives on all FWMoA exhibits. Tours are free with gallery admission.

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: Chuck Sperry, Fort Wayne Museum of Art

October 29, 2013 By squirt

“Kissing The Girl From Jupiter” for Spoke Art’s Exhibition Tribute to Wes Anderson

KISSING-THE-GIRL-FROM-JUPITER

Kissing The Girl From Jupiter
33 x 22
Edition of 50
7 colors on archival cream paper
Signed and Numbered

KISIING-THE-GIRL-FROM-JUPITER-GOLD

Kissing The Girl From Jupiter
33 x 22
Gold Edition of 12
7 colors on gold metallic paper
Signed and Numbered

KISSING-THE-GIRL-FROM-JUPITER-BRONZE

Kissing The Girl From Jupiter
33 x 22
Bronze Edition of 12
7 colors on bronze metallic paper
Signed and Numbered

KISSING-THE-GIRL-FROM-JUPITER-OPAL

Kissing The Girl From Jupiter
33 x 22
Opal Edition of 12
7 colors on opal metallic paper
Signed and Numbered

________________

I’m happy to reveal my new print for Spoke Art’s “Bad Dads, an art show tribute to the films of Wes Anderson.” Below is information regarding the Spoke Art’s show, and below that, my inspiration for creating the print.

Spoke Art is proud to present:
Bad Dads: an art show tribute to the films of Wes Anderson

Friday, November 1st
Halloween costume party at the gallery
All ages, no cover, 6pm – 10pm

Saturday, November 2nd
Halloween costume party at the gallery
All ages, no cover, 6pm – 10pm

Sunday, November 3rd
Castro Theatre triple feature
Bottle Rocket, The Royal Tenenbaums and Moonrise Kingdom
screening starts at 5pm
prints from the show will be available for purchase

Learn more or RSVP via Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/events/535301666558420/ 

Monday, November 4th
All remaining original works and limited edition prints made available online
3pm PST (approximate)
http://spoke-art.com

I have become a huge fan of Moonrise Kingdom, having watched this movie many times.

Last year, I was in constant flight making shows and appearances non-stop; I watched Moonrise Kingdom end to end over a dozen times. These were long flights, whiled away happily involved in Mr. Anderson’s world of Moonrise Kingdom. I have a policy: I would rather watch one excellent movie over and over than to watch one bad movie once.

I flew in my own Moonrise Kingdom from the US to Europe, Europe to the US. Then I watched it some more, 17 hours San Francisco to Argentina for my appearance at the Trimarchi Design Conference and back again 17 hours. Then I watched it yet more from San Francisco to New York City just in time for my ill-fated Moonalice Art Show at the Brooklyn Bowl during Hurricane Sandy with the stars of the San Francisco Rock Poster Tradition (Stanley Mouse and Wes Wilson no less). By the time Halloween ruffled Manhattan the day after the historic hurricane passed, and I strolled to the Neue Museum on East 88th to catch some Vienna Secession art work, passing adorable children in their Halloween costumes, trick-or-treating on the Upper East Side, I was experiencing the pathos of a festival celebrated on the wake of disaster with a mind which had deeply ingested massive doses of Wes Anderson’s tragic serio-comic sensibilities. Strange it was just a year ago. Stranger still, the feeling of having absorbed this movie into one of the busiest and most rewarding and odd periods of my life hasn’t passed.

My art print “Kissing The Girl From Jupiter” for “Bad Dads” is a celebration of the amazing screen chemistry, the romantic pairing of actors Kara Hayward and Jared Gilman who play Suzy Bishop and Sam Shakusky in Moonrise Kingdom. Characters Sam and Suzy are mis-matched lovers caught in a doomed fantasy. Their star-crossed love story takes bloom with a first kiss in their Moonrise Kingdom. I aim to contrast the realism of my portrayal of their figures to a fantastic, near psychedelic background depicting a romantic, emotional truth of first love. It’s a very innocent piece. The title “Kissing the Girl From Jupiter” refers to the title of a science-fiction fantasy book that Suzy has brought with her in her flight to Moonrise Kingdom, one which was featured in the animated short film Wes Anderson made to promote the release of Moonrise Kingdom (see below).

Filed Under: Art Prints, Events Tagged With: Bad Dads, Jared Gilman, Kara Hayward, Moonrise Kingdom, Spoke Art, Wes Anderson

August 31, 2010 By squirt

Faya Gallery – New York City – Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Faya Gallery, 211 Elizabeth Street, New York City, has invited Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry and Peter LeCompte to exhibit their newest work through the month of September. The opening is on Wednesday, September 8, 2010 at 6pm to 9pm. Sperry will be showing his newest poster work, Chris Shaw will be showing his newest paintings, and Peter LeCompte will show his newest hand-painted silkscreen pieces.

This exhibition is a fusion of the rock poster aesthetic and fine art.

In Chris Shaw’s work the rock poster aesthetic informs the painting medium; there is a mash-up of bold psychedelic poster stylings with very painterly techniques informed by Renaissance styles of picture-making and subject matter.

Peter LeCompte is like a DJ who orchestrates pre-arranged musical samples into a continuous mix while also highlighting their obscure connotations. Le Compte juggles memory and color into what appear to be the solidified icons of a recovered happiness – they hark back to the more anxiety-free days of our collective pre-Vietnam war childhood.

Chuck Sperry brings his masterfully created silkscreened rock posters, resonating with the styles drawn from the poster art form’s long tradition – ranging from the roots of the poster tradition in Art Nouveau and Vienna Secession style to Psychedelic, Rock, Punk, Post-Punk, Grunge, Stoner and Pop. In Sperry’s work you can trace the history of the poster medium from the end of the 19th Century to the beginning of the 21st.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry, Faya Gallery, Peter LeCompte

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Online Release with EQL
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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 Alice Donut Poster
  • Chuck Sperry’s “The Mystic” & “Iphigenia” Blotters • 
Online Release with EQL
  • Available Now: Chuck Sperry’s Newest Protest Art Poster
  • Sperry Joins “Women’s Rights Are Human Rights” Exhibition
  • Chuck Sperry’s “Danaide” • New Art Print Launch

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