|
Check out :
www.fecalface.com
Not long ago I was able to catch up with D*Face
and his right hand man, WordtoMother in New York City. I was pretty
impressed to find that a guy who grew up in London was as influenced by
80s American skate culture as many of us were in the states. Taking his
80s skate influences, combined with wicked bold character illustration
and plenty of clever punk rock irony D*Face has developed an artist
style and street art system that is all his own. One thing we can all
be sure of, D*Face will always be the guy to get the last laugh.
Manuel: What is D*face exactly?
D*Face: D*Face is a secret government project, started about 10 years
ago to test the publics awareness and resistance when faced with an
alternative to the mundane advertising that surrounds our public
domain. There is no specific goal, conclusion or end it merely serves
to test cause and reaction.
Manuel: Where did you spend your childhood and what was your upbringing like?
D*Face:
I was raised in London, born and bread to hard working parents. Mum
worked in a bank, Dad worked as a panel beater and bodywork sprayer. I
hated school. I had a very clever sister who was the academic one. I
was never going to step to that so I decided to just sorta find my own
direction. I started to get really into graffiti at a young age. My Mum
stupidly bought me the book 'Spraycan Art'
that pretty much changed my life. I used to draw and doodle and things
like that and tried to be a graff artist as a kid, but I did not really
get the full idea of it. At that time it was an American thing for the
most part. I mean I would see it around, but I did not fully understand
the culture of it in those days. I was too young I guess. Then as I got
a little bit older I got into skateboarding and that was pretty much
the center of my life. Skateboarding changed my life.
Manuel: Who were some of your early skate influences?
D*Face: I was actually talking about this the other night. When I was about 12 years old I saw Back to the Future and it had Per Welinder
doing the skating. That was pretty inspiring back then. Apart from
magazines there was not really any of that American culture coming in
to the UK except for that film. I was like I need to get a wide
skateboard because at the time I had some skinny plastic thing that I
had since I was 5. I kept busy skating around on it because back then
that was what skateboarding was: skinny boards. But before long I
needed to get me a real skateboard, we didn't have any money so it was
a big deal to go and get a new skateboard. I remember looking up at the
walls in the one skate shop in London and it was a Ray Meyers Santa Cruz. It had the art of Jim Philips
gracing the bottom. I was looking up at it and thinking that is the
most amazing thing I have ever seen. I loved that board but it was a
freestyle board and expensive. My mum didn't have the money to buy it
so I ended up getting the 'house' board. It was like a Zig Zag or
something. It was fucking terrible, Variflex wheels and trucks. But it
started it all! Going back to the original question I guess my first
influence was the Ray Meyers board because of the graphics. I guess it
was a combination of skate culture, punk music and the art of Jim
Philips that really got me into skateboarding and into the illustration
side of skateboarding. Of course I didn't even know him as Jim Philips,
except by his art until many years later.
Manuel: You mentioned Per Welinder. I
actually saw Per at a mall in Santa Fe, NM in 1989 and after the demo
(with the one launch ramp set up in the parking lot) me and a couple of
my friends poached it, just so we could say we hit the ramp that he hit.
D*Face: Yeah, the Powell
team came over to Europe and back then it was all about Powell Peralta.
They all came over, Cab, and Tony Hawk and all of them. We went to one
of the very few skate spots in London called Latimer Road, which had a
pretty decent half pipe for the time and we had never seen anything
like it. Those times were amazing for sure.
Manuel: How did you get into illustration work?
D*Face: After I managed to get myself through school, failing all of
the 'academic' subjects, due to skating, graffiti and generally fucking
around, I somehow managed to get into a college for photography. But
again, I just got stoned and fucked around for a couple years and
realized I was never going to be a professional photographer. My mum
was like 'well, I'll get you a job at the bank', my dad was like 'I'll
get you a job as a mechanic' and I was thinking what the hell are the
two of you talking about. I wanted to be a student, and bum around for
a few more years. I was looking into this animation and illustration
program, totally expecting not to get in. Luckily I got an interview
and had this tutor that was totally into the same stuff as me and gave
me a place on the spot. That one guy changed the direction I was going.
Once I started that coarse I realized that all these magazines like Thrasher,
with Jim Philips art and punk music and skateboard culture, was
something that you could do with your life and make a living at it.
There was this moment when everything I had been into in my past locked
and all the suddenly made sense. If I was not doing this God knows what
I would be doing.
Manuel: How would you personally
describe your art and the underlining theme behind it and how did the
street thing all begin for you?
D*Face: Originally it started out as a creative release because I was
really bored with what I was doing. I had spent all this time and
worked really hard to be able to work within the (graphic arts)
industry and thought it was all going to be creatively great. As it
turned out it wasn't the case at all, at least not the situation I was
in back then. On my off time or between jobs I would draw little
characters. It really started out as something I was just doing to
fulfill a creative release. Anywhere I would go I would put up these
stickers and just try to cover as much of London as I could. It kind of
became a subversive intermission to all the shit that was around us.
But I was never really aware of it. I was just putting my shit up
wherever I went!! Then a couple years later the whole sticker scene
really took off in London. I went to this art book opening and there
was a bunch of people milling around. Up to this point I was just doing
my own thing, taking my stickers and printing out bigger versions on
paper and putting them up. Then I show up at this book launch and these
guys were like "fuckin-eh, you did that shit", I was like "um yeah, you
have seen it?" And these guys were like "fuck yeah, it is everywhere!"
The only person I had been out with at that time was Shepard.
We kept in touch and when he would come over we would put some stuff
up. Until that point it did not even occur to me to put my work up to
get people to notice it. It was more escaping the everyday and to get
people to question their environment and culture. Question the
advertising that is around them. It is a little different now, the more
aware the public becomes of street art the less applicable it seems to
be. Because it was like "oh thats D*Face" or "Shepard" or whoever,
instead of what is the meaning behind that.
Manuel: I can see that being true. I remember the stuff in Pictoplasma, from the first books the shit that really stood out to me was your stuff and The London Police.
D*Face: Yeah that is really cool, I have known Chaz from The London
Police since way back. Not since the get go, but they were the only
real crew that was also doing character stuff of that type at the time.
In the same methods that I was using, although at that point I was
doing paste-ups and they were on the drawing direct on the blank
advertising posters. There was one other group of guys doing stuff
called the Toasters.
They would go around pasting toasters. They stopped and laid low for a
long time but actually recently just had a show. Then there was Shepard
who came over in 99' but his stuff was nothing like what we were doing.
Manuel: Can you explain some of the symbolism in your work?
D*Face: Well there are different types of symbolism. Like with the
CliChé piece. It is really quite cliché because that image of Che has
really become such a door matt graphic. These people wear it as a
symbol of them being some kind of revolutionary. They don't seem to
understand they are wearing it as a tee shirt, as a product, which is
so far removed from his beliefs. I also love the idea of him coming
back from the grave to kinda question what all of this consumerism is
about. Same with images of Marilyn, who was probably the first iconic
super model ever. Then there is Andy Warhol
who was the artist to really use the media as a tool. So, combing those
things I hope to make society question their fascination and fixation
with fame and celebrity.
Manuel: For your Death and Glory show
you did the huge metal D*Dog smashing car piece, what was involved in
creating that massive sculpture and do you have any more large projects
lined up?
D*Face: This now friend of mine named Ben Johnson
who was doing big sculpture work had come down to Stolen Space one day.
We started talking and he said: "It would be great to work with you,
would you be interested in putting something together?" I was like yeah
that would be sick. He suggested doing one of my characters but I was
not that into it because I had been doing smaller version of them
already for years. I told him I would be interested in doing something
bigger with some other meaning. Then some time later I had this show
planned and I really wanted to do something grand and massive. I
thought it would be cool to take something that started as a sticker,
that has taking pretty much every path it could have possibly taken and
just take it one step further. I did not really have any money for the
project aside from a couple thousand pounds from a sponsor, but luckily
he was a really cool guy about it and it all worked out. We rented a
space that was big enough to hold this thing. We worked on it straight
for three months. It was a really tense the last 2 weeks trying to get
that shit put together. It turned up the morning of the opening to be
completely unpainted. I was like "Fuck, we have a lot to do", but we
got it done. Working with Ben was really great, he completely
understood me and the way I work, and the kind of finish I needed to
achieve. We were planning on doing a fiberglass cast of the original
and then taking them around and doing various street installations,
leave mobile version in the street so we could see what happens to them
but didn't since we never sold the original, which was not surprising
to either one of us. We do have another massive something planned for
later this year.
Manuel: How much other street work are you doing these days?
D*Face: A lot less than I would like to be doing and a lot less than I
have done in the past. It is always a difficult thing. I mean my heart
lies in the street. That is where I come from and how this whole thing
has come about. It is a slightly different feeling with a gallery show.
Obviously, if I am doing a show in a gallery I want to at least succeed
with it and put as much into it as possible. I also had a kid last
year, so my weekends are spent with my family. Evenings I am trying to
get home at a reasonable hour, which does not always happen, as I am
sure you can understand. We do a lot of street work when we travel. Did
a bunch of stuff in Norway and try to do as much as we can when we come
to New York. Not as much stuff as I would have liked but New York can
be a difficult place to put stuff up these days.
Wordtomother: Plus this time around there were a few problems with our
shit getting through customs. It does not make it easy. There were a
few hindrances this trip.
D*Face: We are coming back later this year. We plan to do some stuff
then. The thing about New York is, it is a different city than London.
I have come out here with Shepard and just put up loads of shit in one
or two nights. Times have changed, New York is aware of it now and it
makes it difficult. When you are spending a few days here preparing for
a show or whatever, do you want to risk of spending a couple nights in
jail?
Manuel: New York has definitely become
overly saturated with street artist. Every Tom, Dick and Harry is
slapping shit up whether it is good or not. Do you feel like it is the
same in London?
D*Face: There was a period of time that that was the case. We are in
2008 now aren't we... I guess it was 2005 or maybe 2004 that every
fucker seemed to have a sticker or thought they were a street artist
and it got to the point where I was finding myself a little pissed off
about it. I guess I was feeling a bit stifled in all of it. Lets face
it, you can not really make any kind of impact when there is a million
others doing the same shit that you are doing. At the same time I have
always had this view that if it is "street" art than I should support
it. Anyone who goes and makes their art public, then great. There is no
gallery critic saying this one is good or this one is bad. It is
freedom of speech and that is what makes it such an amazing thing to go
out and do. I just think that people who are going out and doing it
should be doing what they do, rather than what others are already
doing. The alternative is there are all these kids looking at what has
already been done and in the end you end up with a thousand of Banksys.
Wordtomother: I must say in London it does seem to be a lot more
garbage out there than in the past. Just a few years back it was not
about anything but the love of it. Now it seems that there is some
recognition coming into play with all this and people have began to
come up with these other motives. People are seeing some of the bigger
guys in the scene getting gallery shows from it and they will put up a
piece of paper or a few stickers somewhere and that will be it. I don't
think that many of these kids get the scale of it and it is more than
just that.
D*Face: That is another thing, there are other guys who have been
around for five minutes getting gallery shows and selling their work
for crazy money, especially in the UK. I think that the art scene is
the same as any. You have to pay your dues. There is this factor that
has become less about the street art and more about the street
aesthetics. You may have drippy tags in you work but you might have
never done a drippy tag in your life. I think that people are starting
to feed from that and it is sneaking its way into contemporary art
culture. They're not street artists but they are representing
themselves as that. Half the time I also find myself questioning what
people's motivations are.
Manuel: Do you think that the European street scene is more of a form of expressionism?
D*Face: I do think that in the UK people are a little bit more
receptive to that. Just from people who I have spoken to here in the
States. Like WK
for example, I had seen a massive amount of his work up in New York but
have not heard a whole lot about it. I wonder if it would have been
better received in Europe. No mater how you look at it, he did it with
the imagery and message that he thought needed to be out there, that
alone says a lot. As a whole I think there is more of a social or
political comment that is being made in Europe or at least in the UK.
I'm not saying that artist in the States don't have social or political
agendas. I just think that in the UK that is something that is more
evident. There are those in the States however who are getting a
message across without question.
Manuel: Where do you see this movement
in 10 to 20 years, do you think your work will find its way to some
more established art museums?
D*Face: If it does or it doesn't, it really does not matter. I would
like to think that at some point the street scene will be given the
recognition it deserves. I would like to think that it will be hung in
the right places. It is really difficult to think of some of it hung in
some of these museums. They just seem so... formal. The way all of this
street art has come about is so informal. I think in order for street
art to infiltrate some of these places there will have to be some key
people who really do believe in the spirit of the art. All I can say is
I was around before it was this big movement and I will be around if it
disappears. If I have to support myself doing some other job than
that's what I'll do, I've done it before and I'll do it again... but I
hope it doesn't come to that!!
Manuel: I think this is an obvious
question that you have probably already answered but do you prefer your
art in the street or gallery?
D*Face: I love doing work in the street but it is also nice to be
creating gallery work as well. I think the two things can exist
together. I obviously try to approach the things I do in the street
differently than the way I approach work I'm doing for the gallery.
Wordtomother: Plus as an artist I think that type of approach gives you
the freedom to go down both avenues. D*Face: It is true. I like to
think of my work as going down a path of sorts. I hope that people get
that and if they have been following it they can see that. I understand
when people say I wish you would just keep doing more character stuff.
I also understand people saying that they love the stuff I am doing now
much more than what I was doing in the past. But I think it is
important to have some repetition in your work in the same sense that
can be a little bit stifling. There are also those other more personal
reasons why my work has taken the path it has. The whole play with
death comes from having some things in my life that were pretty tough
and dark.
Manuel: There is also a very literal way of looking at those death pieces.
D*Face: As I said, what I was trying to do with those pieces was
question the whole idea of celebrity and fame. That is the one thing
that we cannot deny is that we are all going to die. That is the point,
to question the celebrity status of these people. But as soon as they
die they almost become legends. There are those celebrities who people
say if he or she would have died much younger it would be much better.
Really, if you think about it, a lot of the true pop culture legends
died at a young age. Is it the person that society is in love with or
thought of what or who they are. There is pretty much an endless game
you could play with that.
Manuel: Where does the merchandise and vinyl toy thing fall in to all this art stuff for you?
D*Face: Ya know, that is a difficult thing. I was approached about
doing the vinyl toy thing and at the time I was really stoked to do it.
But what it looks like and what it ends up becoming are two totally
different things. I wish now that I had never done it. I don't know
that I would do it again unless I knew that it would be executed
exactly the way I wanted it to be. The vinyl toy thing is something
that everyone has jumped in. Like anything, there are maybe a handful
of people whose shit will be worth what you paid for it down the road
and in some cases more. I bought a few of the Kaws toys way back when, the Futura stuff, some James Jarvis
and some of those became worth crazy money. But not long after that it
was crazy money just to buy any of them, and everyone started to turn
them out so quickly I finally had to say enough. Plus these toy people
never take them out the packaging. Fuck that, if I'm paying good money
for these things I want to take it out and feel that shit.
Manuel: Does D*Face Have any words of wisdom?
Wordtomother: Stolen Space.com
D*Face: (Laughs) The only thing I can really say is, do what you do from the heart and it will lead you in the right direction.
Many thanks to: D*Face, Wordtomother, and Malena Seldin
|