DEADFLY

A personal blog.
I'm 22
I don't own anything on here unless it says DEADFLY.

Mad light. #rusellwestbrook #hyperfuse (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

Mad light. #rusellwestbrook #hyperfuse (Taken with instagram)

Ridin round and gettin it ! (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

Ridin round and gettin it ! (Taken with instagram)

New shirt I picked up. (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

New shirt I picked up. (Taken with instagram)

Chillin watching this reasonable doubt documentry. This pic looks like horror movie. (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

Chillin watching this reasonable doubt documentry. This pic looks like horror movie. (Taken with instagram)

#fashion #books #art #louisvuitton (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

#fashion #books #art #louisvuitton (Taken with instagram)

#nofilter for this baby (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

#nofilter for this baby (Taken with instagram)

The 40oz van Balmain inspired NY snapback. Simple and clean. One of the best designed hats i’ve seen since Jeff Staples classic pigeon hat.

Some real mordern art shit. @40oz_van View high resolution

The 40oz van Balmain inspired NY snapback. Simple and clean. One of the best designed hats i’ve seen since Jeff Staples classic pigeon hat.

Some real mordern art shit. @40oz_van

The god body himself (me) (Taken with instagram) View high resolution

The god body himself (me) (Taken with instagram)

Keith Haring: 1978-1982, the first large-scale exhibition to explore the early career of one of the best-loved American artists of last century will be presented at the Brooklyn Museum from April 13 through August 5, 2012.

Organized by curator Raphaela Platow of Cincinnati’s Contemporary Arts Center and the Kunsthalle Wien of Austria, the Brooklyn stop is coordinated by the associate curator of photography at the Brooklyn Museum, Patrick Amsellem.

Keith Haring, “Untitled” (1978) © Keith Haring Foundation

The exhibition focused on the formative years of Haring’s career from the time of his arrive in New York from Pennsylvania “through the years when he started his studio practice and began making public and political art on the city streets.”

During this era, Haring quickly became a fixture in New York’s downtown scene and associated with the likes of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Kenny Scharf and other artists who loved to blur the boundaries between street art, performance, poetry, fashion and music.

The show will delve into a time when Haring was still finding the visual language that became his signature by the mid-1980s. Among the works on display will be seven video pieces (including his very first, “Haring Paints Himself into a Corner,” in which he paints to the music of the band Devo, and “Tribute to Gloria Vanderbilt”) and collages created from cut-up fragments of his own writing, history textbooks and newspapers that closely relate to collage flyers he created with a Xerox machine.

“This exhibition of Keith Haring focuses on his early works from 1978 to 1982, in many cases work that has rarely if ever been seen. In this period Haring experimented with abstraction and semiotics and developed his visual vocabulary,” Amsellem says. ”All the works are on paper and the show also includes several of Haring’s early video pieces that express his interest in the performative aspect of art making. The show includes a rich trove of archival material that presents Haring’s thoughts on artistic process and his role as a facilitator and curator of many group shows and performances on the downtown scene. It follows the emergence of a unique talent just as he was finding his artistic voice.” View high resolution

Keith Haring: 1978-1982, the first large-scale exhibition to explore the early career of one of the best-loved American artists of last century will be presented at the Brooklyn Museum from April 13 through August 5, 2012.

Organized by curator Raphaela Platow of Cincinnati’s Contemporary Arts Center and the Kunsthalle Wien of Austria, the Brooklyn stop is coordinated by the associate curator of photography at the Brooklyn Museum, Patrick Amsellem.

Keith Haring, “Untitled” (1978) © Keith Haring Foundation

The exhibition focused on the formative years of Haring’s career from the time of his arrive in New York from Pennsylvania “through the years when he started his studio practice and began making public and political art on the city streets.”

During this era, Haring quickly became a fixture in New York’s downtown scene and associated with the likes of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Kenny Scharf and other artists who loved to blur the boundaries between street art, performance, poetry, fashion and music.

The show will delve into a time when Haring was still finding the visual language that became his signature by the mid-1980s. Among the works on display will be seven video pieces (including his very first, “Haring Paints Himself into a Corner,” in which he paints to the music of the band Devo, and “Tribute to Gloria Vanderbilt”) and collages created from cut-up fragments of his own writing, history textbooks and newspapers that closely relate to collage flyers he created with a Xerox machine.

“This exhibition of Keith Haring focuses on his early works from 1978 to 1982, in many cases work that has rarely if ever been seen. In this period Haring experimented with abstraction and semiotics and developed his visual vocabulary,” Amsellem says. ”All the works are on paper and the show also includes several of Haring’s early video pieces that express his interest in the performative aspect of art making. The show includes a rich trove of archival material that presents Haring’s thoughts on artistic process and his role as a facilitator and curator of many group shows and performances on the downtown scene. It follows the emergence of a unique talent just as he was finding his artistic voice.”

Ultralite Powered by Tumblr | Designed by:Doinwork