Chuck Sperry

  • Blog
  • About
  • Press & Reviews
  • Contact
  • Store
  • Books: Color x Color • Helikon • Chthoneon • Idyllion

July 6, 2012 By squirt

Chuck Sperry Interview for “Occupy Bay Area” at YBCA

SF Bay Guardian raw interview with Chuck Sperry re: “Occupy Bay Area” exhibit at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco
July 2, 2012
Chuck Sperry, 2011 (Photo credit: Nick Cernak)
Caitlin Donohue, SFBG: At what moment did you realize that Occupy was an important event? How did you first hear about it? 
Chuck Sperry: Through the beginning of 2011, I was creating an installation for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art curated by Renee de Cossio, with artists Chris Shaw and Ron Donovan. Each artist would install work in one of three Artists’ Gallery Windows on the side of the SFMOMA on Minna Street. The proposal for the installation was to bring the aesthetic of San Francisco’s poster traditions to painting, and to realize these in monumental form. I wanted this piece to reflect San Francisco’s poster history beginning in the Freedom of Speech movement through the 1960’s, and to also reflect the Psychedelic tradition that gave birth to the Rock Poster.
While I was working on an 11 foot by 9 foot acrylic painting – through the beginning of 2011- I was following the progress of the Arab Spring movements, Tahrir Square. I decided to use my reaction to these events as inspiration for an iconographic painting titled, “Saint Everyone.” I wanted to express the opening mind, and spreading enlightened humanism, the decentralization of power – or awakening sense of people power – to this piece. I used vibrating, reactive colors to paint a figure holding an opening lotus (symbol of enlightenment), against a background of Op Art circles, which communicate decentralization – that the background has many centers – like the movement which has no leaders.
“Saint Everyone” was installed at the SFMOMA in June 2011. So I was getting with it by then.
Saint Everyone, 2011
Chuck Sperry
As Occupy Oakland was forming by the Fall of 2011, my artist friend Jon-Paul Bail of Political Gridlock was printing his iconographic “Hella Occupy Oakland” posters on Frank Ogawa Plaza – re-named Oscar Grant Plaza – from the point when people were first gathering there. When I say printing, Jon-Paul Bail was printing live, right there, with a table set up in the open, printing and handing people freshly made posters. In a few short weeks he had printed hundreds, if not, thousands of posters which were being handed out to people there. He was joined there on Oscar Grant Plaza by Melanie Cervantes and Jesus Barraza of Dignidad Rebelde, who created more iconographic posters for the Occupy movement.
CD: What led to your decision to make art inspired by Occupy? Was it a different process than your other creative projects?
CS: In September I was in an art show, LA VS. WAR, with Bail, Barraza, and Cervantes, (among others) and we discussed making posters for the November 2 Occupy action to close the Port of Oakland. Fellow artist Chris Shaw – who was involved in the SFMOMA Window Gallery Installation – offered to pay for the production of any Occupy posters through the printing account of rock band Moonalice who was in solidarity with Occupy.
This Is Our City And We Can Shut It Down, 2011
Chuck Sperry
I created “This Is Our City, And We Can Shut It Down.” I usually work with images and take a lot of time to work my art into a design. In this case, the message was so over-riding and important, that I felt it was my job as an artist to stay out of the way, and let the words and message do their job. So in this way it was different. I used color theories learned in studying the long San Francisco tradition of Psychedelic poster art, the use of hot colors against cold colors to make the words read from a half mile away – haha! I wanted a strong, radical message, used with bold nurturing colors that convey a positive emotion. It would not be a typical political poster.
CD: How do you want your Occupy poster to be used/beheld?
CS: Chris Shaw and I discussed printing our posters on heavy paper stock, and printing on both sides to double the exposure we could give people to our message. You could use this poster as a placard, hold it up over your head. It would make quite an impression and be useful to the action. I stood at Oscar Grant Plaza next to the street and passed out nearly 1000 posters in 45 minutes to the front of the march, so when television cameras picked up the action at the Port of Oakland, the front of the march was a sea of my poster with the message, “This Is Our City, And We Can Shut It Down.” No one directed us to make these posters. No one asked. We just did it. And passed them out.
CD: What is some of your favorite protest art from history (can be your work or someone else’s)
CS: I am very inspired by Emory Douglas’ art in the Black Panther Party newspaper. I’ve had the honor to work with Mr. Douglas to reprint some of his iconic images. I also am very fond of the French Situationist posters of May 1968, and had the good fortune to print a poster, while I was visiting Paris to make a poster show about 5 years ago, on the very same press that produced these memorable images. When my artist friend told me that Guy Debord had worked with artists on this very same press, I laughed and dropped to my knees and just could not believe it.
I invited Jon-Paul Bail to collaborate in teaching a class at The Free University of San Francisco, as I’m organizing the Art Department of that cooperatively organized free school. We told the story of making posters for the Occupy movement and created a poster for the Occupy Education action last Spring. I think the ideas coming together from the Occupy protests will move through society in a very healthy and transformative way. There’s no way to stop people once they have been awakened to their potential.
CD: What is the role of art in social protest?
CS: Art can reach many people in many walks of life. I was invited by San Francisco’s Varnish Fine Art Gallery to exhibit at SCOPE / Miami in conjunction with Art Basel Miami art fair. Even in the context of the fine art world I felt it was important to express the social revolution that was taking place through the Occupy movement, and created a piece titled, “Mind Spring,” which expressed some of the same ideas I put in my SFMOMA painting and my Occupy poster. In Mind Spring, I created an icon of the Worldwide Occupy Movement and it’s antecedent in the Arab Spring. The figure wreathed in blooming spring flowers is a representation of the surprising enlightened humanism, the opening mind, the broadened socio-political possibilities which has swept the world in 2011.
Mind Spring, 2011
Chuck Sperry
I’ve been contributing to a political magazine called World War 3 Illustrated, a New York publication, which is cooperatively edited by Seth Tobocman and Peter Kuper, and a number of legendary artists over the years. WW3 is America’s longest running political comic book; it’s been published for over 25 years. I’ve had many discussions about the role of political art over the years. Two solutions to this problem constantly come to mind, first, Content Over Style, that Content is more important than Style. Your message is the most important element in creating art of social protest. Second, that the Personal Is Political, your own experience is so very often shared by others all over the world. When you make a piece of art in social protest, and just tell your story from your own perspective, and you do not hold back, you will be describing a situation that is shared by others half a world away. It’s uncanny, but our local problems are very similar to everyone else’s globally. So get in there and try to change what you can from where you are. Many hands make light work.

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Chuck Sperry, Occupy Bay Area, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

June 22, 2012 By squirt

Chuck Sperry at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, July 7 – October 14

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Presents:

Occupy Bay Area
July 7-October 14, 2012
Gallery 3
$10 Regular/ $8 students, senior, discount
FREE for YBCA Members & YBCA:You
FREE first Tuesday of each month • noon – 8 pm

Since its inception in September 2011, the Occupy Movement has generated both praise and condemnation. A direct response to the financial instability, subprime mortgage crisis and the decline of trust in the government’s ability to effectively address the problems in the labor market, it continues to resonate in the American consciousness. In response to the significant output of art and documentation produced in support of the Occupy Movement in Oakland and San Francisco, YBCA has put together an exhibition of works that have proven to be particularly effective in supporting the goals and aspirations of the Movement. Impressively, various political poster artists devoted their talents to messaging the politics and culture of the movement by creating iconic images — designs that were a call to action, or posters announcing an upcoming event. In many ways these works, by twenty-five Bay Area artists, carry forward the region’s long tradition as a leader in political struggles, from the Free Speech Movement of the 1960s, to struggles by communities of color in the 1970s, to AIDS activism in the 1980s. The exhibition also includes a selection of photojournalistic and documentary photography and video that serve as a record of the events around the Occupy Movement.

Additionally, to connect to earlier movements and provide a historical context for the project, the exhibition includes posters and photographs from other political struggles, including the Black Panther Party, I-Hotel in Manilatown (1968–77); the ARC/AIDS Vigil at City Hall (1985–95); the Occupation of Alcatraz (1969–71); the Free Speech Movement at UC Berkeley (1964–65); and the San Francisco State University protests, to gain an Ethnic Studies program and Black Student Union demands (1968–69).While these earlier movements certainly differ in ways from Occupy, they all are the result of a deep desire for marginalized peoples to be represented and treated fairly.

This exhibition is not meant to represent a fully executed social history, but is a testament of the power of images to evoke the emotional expression of popular and wide-spread sentiments. By localizing our efforts, we also pay special tribute to the role that Bay Area artists have played in giving voice to the 99% and utilizing art as an effective vehicle for social change.

Poster artists:
Rich Black
Zerena Diaz
Cannon Dill
Dignidad Rebelde (Melanie Cervantes and Jesus Barraza)
Eric Drooker
Alexandra Fisher
Dave Garcia
Ronnie Goodman
Jason Justice
Gabby Miller and Miriam Klein Stahl
Nuclear Winter Art
Occupy Design
Political Gridlock (Jon-Paul Bail)
Cristy C. Road
Faviana Rodriguez
Chris Shaw
Colin Smith
Winston Smith
Chuck Sperry
Xavier Viramontes
Gregoirire Vion
Fred Zaw
Anonymous artists

Aligned artists:
Sergio de la Torre
Kota Ezawa
Eric Drooker
Megan Wilson
Suzanne Lacy
Sanaz Mazinani

Artists of historical posters & photographs:
Robert Bechtle
Emory Douglas
Rupert Garcia
Ilka Hartmann
Steven Marcus
“Indian Joe” Morris
Rachael Romero
Sheila Tully
Anonymous artists

Photojournalism and video artists:
Li Chen
Ewen Wright

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: “Indian Joe” Morris, Alexandra Fischer, Cannon Dill, Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry, Colin Smith, Cristy C Road, Dave Garcia, Dignidad Rebelde (Melanie Cervantes & Jesus Barraza), Emory Douglas, Eric Drooker, Ewen Wright, Favianna Rodriguez, Fred Zaw, Gabby Miller, Gregoirire Vion, Ilka Hartmann, Jason Justice, Jon-Paul Bail, Kota Ezawa, Li Chen, Megan Wilson, Miriam Klein Stahl, Nuclear Winter Art, Occupy Design, Political Gridlock, Rachael Romero, Rich Black, Robert Bechtle, Ronnie Goodman, Rupert Garcia, Sanaz Mazinani, Sergio de la Torre, Sheila Tully, Steven Marcus, Suzanne Lacy, Winston Smith, Xavier Viramontes, Zerena Diaz

May 22, 2012 By squirt

Sperry Shows with Varnish Fine Art at ArtPad SF

Hi-Fructose • May 22, 2012 • by Nastia Voynovskaya

7 x 7 Magazine • August 2012

Filed Under: Press & Reviews Tagged With: 7x7 Magazine, ArtPad, Chuck Sperry, Hi-Fructose, Nastia Voynovskaya, Varnish Fine Art

May 16, 2012 By squirt

“Alpha” & “Omega” Art Prints

“Alpha” 2012

23 x 35

6 colors on archival cream paper

Edition of 50

Signed and Numbered

_______________

“Alpha” 2012

Silver Edition

23 x 35

6 colors on silver metallic paper

Edition of 10

Signed and Numbered

_______________

“Alpha” 2012

Bronze Edition

23 x 35

5 colors on bronze metallic paper

Edition of 10

Signed and Numbered

_______________

“Alpha” 2012

Gold Edition

23 x 35

5 colors on gold metallic paper

Edition of 10

Signed and Numbered

SOLD OUT – Thank You!

_______________

“Alpha” 2012

Birch Panel Edition

23 x 35

6 colors on birch wood panel

Edition of 15

Signed and Numbered

_______________

“Omega” 2012

23 x 35

6 colors on archival cream paper

Edition of 50

Signed and Numbered

________________

“Omega” 2012

Silver Edition

23 x 35

6 colors on silver metallic paper

Edition of 10

Signed and Numbered

________________

“Omega” 2012

Bronze Edition

23 x 35

5 colors on bronze metallic paper

Edition of 10

Signed and Numbered

________________

“Omega” 2012

Gold Edition

23 x 35

5 colors on gold metallic paper

Edition of 10

Signed and Numbered

SOLD OUT – Thank You!

________________

“Omega” 2012

Birch Panel Edition

23 x 35

6 colors on birch wood panel

Edition of 15

Signed and Numbered

_______________

My “Alpha” & “Omega” art prints, variant editions and birch panels will be released on Friday, May 18, at 4:20 pm by Varnish Fine Art at San Francisco’s coolest art festival – ArtPad at the Phoenix Hotel.

Varnish & I will be making a very limited online release here on my site on Saturday, May 19, 2012 at a random time.

Here’s a large image of the two prints side-by-side:

________________

From May 17 to May 20, over 10,000 art enthusiasts and collectors will return to the iconic Phoenix Hotel for the second edition of ArtPadSF, San Francisco’s only hotel-based art fair. Referred to by art community insiders as “a touch of Art Basel Miami in San Francisco,” ArtPadSF is an unparalleled crossroads for the creative and marketplace for groundbreaking contemporary art.

Meet the Varnish Fine Art crew in Room 30 at the Phoenix Hotel for ArtPadSF 2012

Featured Artists:

Jennybird Alcantara
Mike Davis
Jessica Joslin
Chris Mars
Ransom & Mitchell
Isabel Samaras
Chuck Sperry

Here’s a preview of all the fantastic art Varnish Fine Art will be laying on the public this coming weekend – click here for more details

 

Filed Under: Art Prints, Events Tagged With: ArtPad, Chris Mars, Chuck Sperry, Isabel Samaras, Jennybird Alcantara, Jessica Joslin, Mike Davis, Ransom & Mitchell, Varnish Fine Art

January 4, 2012 By squirt

Mind Spring – Chuck Sperry, Chris Shaw, Ron Donovan – at Varnish Fine Art SF

Mind Spring
Chuck Sperry, Chris Shaw, Ron Donovan
New paintings, installations, and limited silkscreen editions

Varnish Fine Art, 16 Jesse Street, #c120, San Francisco, California 94105 – phone: 415-433-4400

Artist Reception: January 14, 2012, 4pm to 7pm

JANUARY 14 – FEBRUARY 18, 2012

Lending rock and alternative music a form of visual expression in sync with their urban environments, Chuck Sperry, Chris Shaw, and Ron Donovan embrace, alter, re-assign meaning and re-contextualize images until they become the medium-the subject emerging, used purposely–irreverently or reverently–to transform ephemeral events and experiences into a lexicon of shared cultural visual memory.

“Donovan, Shaw and Sperry have made their living creating expressive contemporary prints and posters for both the collector and the general public whose capacity for images is not just at its maximum, but teetering on overload. Dedication to their craft has rewarded them with a mastery of color theory, composition and print design that creates a language that can be seen, perhaps almost heard, amidst a visually competitive, urban environment. Never known for following the consensus of any art establishment, these three have a strict loyalty to their craft, and have become leading innovators of the rock poster art form. Their suspicion and disdain for mainstream American politics often characterizes their approach to making art. With a sincere dedication to a broad public audience, they reflect a social consciousness and draw much from the immediate urban environment.” – Renee de Cossio, curator SFMOMA

In Mind Spring, Sperry creates an icon of the Worldwide Occupy Movement and it’s antecedent in the Arab Spring. The figure wreathed in blooming spring flowers is a representation of the surprising enlightened humanism, the opening mind, the broadened socio-political possibilities which has swept the world in 2011.

Press Release

We look forward to seeing you, and celebrating the closing of our installation at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

I will be offering new large format works on wood panel, with limited paper and variant paper editions as well. These will be released at the show and then very soon after on my website at a time to be announced. Stay tuned I’ll post these new works, and release times as the show approaches.

———————————-

Below, I’ve included SFMOMA curator Renee de Cossio’s statement on our installation at the Museum:

Ongoing until January 12, 2012, SFMOMA Artists Gallery is presenting three S.F. Bay Area artists Ron Donovan, Chris Shaw and Chuck Sperry and their site specific art installations in a 24/7 exhibit at the SF MOMA Garage Windows on Minna and Natoma Streets.  For almost twenty years, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry have been cultivating and developing an important component of the music scene and culture: the Rock Art Poster.   Lending rock and alternative music a form of visual expression, in sync with their urban environments, the artists embrace, alter, re- assign or retain meaning, re-contextualize the image, not just as the image, but the image as the medium. The image is their medium, and the subject emerges and is used purposely, irreverently, or reverently, engaging viewers – asking them to stop, look and listen.

Donovan, Shaw and Sperry have made their living creating expressive contemporary prints and posters for both the collector and the general public whose capacity for images is not just at its maximum, but teetering on overload. Dedication to their craft has rewarded them with a mastery of color theory, composition and print design that creates a language that can be seen, perhaps almost heard, amidst a visually competitive, urban environment.

Donovan, Shaw and Sperry often reference the legacy of founding rock poster artists, such as Wes Wilson, Rick Griffin, Victor Moscoso and Stanley Mouse (creators of famous album covers for Grateful Dead, Steve Miller, Quicksilver, and Aoxomoxoa, and the many posters of the 60’s and 70’s that papered walls and street posts announcing concerts for Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Led Zeppelin, to name a few).  These originators of the rock poster including promoter Bill Graham, had established it as a visual arts vehicle, giving it an identity of its own, characterized by unusual, off-beat color combinations, dynamic fonts and captivating imagery.  Irreverence, imbedded into the beat of the times, resonated through many forms of expression.  Many of these early rock poster artists made a conscious break from formal art norms and standards taking departure through artistic exploration that included altered perceptions and “new” ways of thinking and seeing.  The posters became part of a messaging system that played an important role both locally and nationally, in moving and gathering people, engaging them to take part in the social movements of the time.

Building on the socially aware art poster scene of the 1960’s and acutely aware of its mostly unwritten art history, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry share a philosophy, a DIY (do it yourself) mindset; the use of their art sprang out as an expression of guerilla marketing, contributing to the successful efforts of many musicians and independent music labels, (Jello Biafra’s Alternative Tentacles label, and bands Metallica, Green Day, Faith No More, and The Melvins, etc.).  Remarkably, these three working artists with a prolific work output demonstrate an acute awareness of social context and popular culture. In doing so, they can often be seen as a visual measure, even mediums, of social currents and constructs.  It is where Internet 2.0 comes full circle around to life in the physical world; with a language of visuals and word of mouth marketing that is art.

Heirs of the 1960’s San Francisco Bay Area rock poster artists, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry are the next generation, whose process and approach to art making, reflect the varied complexities of contemporary times.  In this exhibition, the artists expand beyond the confines of formatting described by standard paper dimensions, to create monumental, colorful, hand painted, multi-dimensional, art installations – which are black lit at night.

In the Minna Street windows, each has created his own individual installation and has chosen a female as his main subject.  Although the artists have worked closely together for years, each installation is as different in style as its creator:

Chuck Sperry’s Saint Everyone, features a woman with long hair gazing toward the viewer over her bare back and right shoulder.  On large canvas, she is surrounded by an opt-art patterned sphere and background and is painted in fiery-hot red drastically contrasted by her features and details painted in an opaque sky blue.  With an ambiguous stare suggesting worry, fear or perhaps anger, she lifts a lotus flower upward between the viewer and her gaze, as an offering gesture, perhaps a warning.  Her presence evokes a sense of humanism, sensuality and spirituality—all which seem caught in a crucial state in a chaotic world displayed by the painting’s reactive background.  

Next to Sperry’s installation, is Chris Shaw’s Madonna Fukushima.  The richly colored painted canvas features a Japanese woman in traditional dress standing, caught balancing herself with a container of flowers, nature’s gifts from the garden, in one hand while grasping at her cloak in the other.  Sadly things will never be as they once were.  Her expression speaks of shock and alarm.  Her once calm, peaceful world has turned into a stirring, crashing deluge of catastrophic proportions described by a Hokusai wave and ocean swells engulfing the Fukushima nuclear reactors in the background. 

In the third window is Ron Donovan’s multi- layered print on wood panels titled Keeper of the Gate. Amazonian-in presence, provocative, his main female subject is suited in an armor of multi-cultural symbols and imagery from eastern and Pan Pacific ethnicities.   She stands grasping a Hindu sword in each hand.  Sexuality, spirituality, and ancient religious mythology and metaphor are her weapons. Wearing wings, like Garuda the male winged god, she displays the combined characteristics of animals and divine beings. 

Black lit? Rather than to remind one of the head shops of earlier decades, the change in lighting activates the artists’ delivery of alternate perceptions of color, and maybe even a moment of synesthesiastic viewing.  (Synesthesia is a neurological condition where stimulation of one sense or thought process leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in another sense; for example, seeing colors when you hear music, and vice versa). The work raises questions about how one really sees color and if, in the act of seeing, there is more to experience than some acknowledgement of what you think you are seeing?  Can or does one feel color– perhaps even hear it?  Marrying music with a visual art form, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry continue exploring and seeking ways to expand the visual experience.  They apply their depth of knowledge of color theory principles, ultimately by purposely and creatively altering formal color relationships and aesthetics. Viewers can see these works under conventional light conditions by day, and return to a very different experience under the black lights at night.  Through color and perception, the artists suggest opportunities for new sensorial visual perceptions, introducing non-classified forms of art to a much classified and defined art world.

Never known for following the consensus of any art establishment, these three have a strict loyalty to their craft, and have become leading innovators of the rock poster art form.  Their suspicion and disdain for mainstream American politics often characterizes their approach to making art.   With a sincere dedication to a broad public audience, they reflect a social consciousness and draw much from the immediate urban environment. 

In the Natoma windows, Chris Shaw and Chuck Sperry collaborated to present Temporary Bound.  In 3 separate hinged and painted panels totaling almost 60 feet in length, are three gorgons representing the Greek myth of Perseus and Medusa. There are different translations of the myth, but each share a reaction in one way or another to the perilous nature of feminine beauty.  

Shaw and Sperry describe the installation:

“The work’s form is derived from an Asian “accordion” book, while the  subject, “Three Gorgons” reflects the artists’ western influences.  The free intertwining of Eastern and Western references is not only  evocative of the modern technological world, but also of San  Francisco, a cultural melting pot on the Pacific Rim.”

Here is a link to continue reading their description of the work.

– Renee de Cossio, curator SFMOMA

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry, Mind Spring, Ron Donovan, Varnish Fine Art

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 73
  • 74
  • 75
  • 76
  • 77
  • …
  • 82
  • Next Page »

Latest News

  • Release • Sperry Collectible Card Set • Series 4
  • Chuck Sperry’s “Courage” Blotter Online Release
  • Sperry Collectible Card Set • Series 3 • Releases Soon!
  • Chuck Sperry Shows at CONTEXT / Art Basel with Harman Projects
  • “Chuck Sperry: Exposed!” Art Show in Torino Italy October 31

Topics

  • Art Prints
  • Event Posters
  • Events
  • Movie Posters
  • News
  • Original Art
  • Press & Reviews
  • Rock Posters
  • Site

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…

Archives

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

Latest Blog Posts

  • Release • Sperry Collectible Card Set • Series 4
  • Chuck Sperry’s “Courage” Blotter Online Release
  • Sperry Collectible Card Set • Series 3 • Releases Soon!
  • Chuck Sperry Shows at CONTEXT / Art Basel with Harman Projects
  • “Chuck Sperry: Exposed!” Art Show in Torino Italy October 31

Band, Venue, Year…

© 2009–2026 Chuck Sperry - All Rights Reserved.

 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.