WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonians
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden will partner with the Southwest Business Improvement District to present Brand New SW, a new public art project celebrating Washington, D.C.s innovative and collaborative art scene. The museum invited Washington-based artists No Kings Collective, NoMüNoMü and SUPERWAXX to create graphic posters, inspired by Brand New: Art and Commodity in the 1980s, the Hirshhorns current exhibition exploring the connection between art and marketing in the 1980s. These limited-edition posters will be wheatpasted around select public spaces in Southwest Washington beginning the first week of April, an homage to the underground art practices of the 80s.
Brand New SW is the newest project from Hirshhorn in the City, the museums initiative to bring new contemporary art beyond the museum walls and into the Washingtons public spaces, connecting artists and curators with the citys creative communities.
On Thursday, April 19, 711 p.m., the Hirshhorn and No Kings Collective will partner to host 80s-inspired launch party featuring iconic music from the decade, free limited-edition swag, DIY art-making, one-night only installations and interactive pop-ups from each the Brand New SW artists.
Brand New SW highlights the connection between the art world today and the 80s art scene that radiated from New York Citys East Village, where a pioneering generation of artists used elements of advertising to blur the line between art and commerce. No Kings Collective, NoMüNoMü, and SUPERWAXX represent a new generation of artists that push the limits of art, brand and community engagement. Saturating designs with their signature styles, pop culture references, logos and textincluding powerful personal messagesthey create new platforms for creativity in the streets and galleries of the city.
Its thrilling to see the ideas and aesthetics of the exhibition Brand New resonate decades later in the vision and practice of these exceptional DC artists, said Hirshhorn Director Melissa Chiu. More and more, contemporary art is a vital part of the everyday life of Washington, a creative force that is driving city-wide conversations about the importance of culture in the 21st century.
Hirshhorn in the City allows the museum to foster partnerships around the city, and to create more ways for Washington residents to discover contemporary art, sparking inspiration in the everyday. Other current projects include Yoko Onos public mural on the side of Union Market in Northeast Washington.
The recent provocative and powerful installations at the Hirshhorn challenge business districts like us to rethink how we manage complex places that include neighborhoods, public parks and commercial spaces, said Steve Moore, executive director of the Southwest Business Improvement District. The ideas coming from the Hirshhorn and their Hirshhorn in the City program are so stimulating that we view them as a source of inspiration
and fun.
No Kings Collective is a design-build studio, creative agency and events production company, all rolled into one. Founded in 2009 by Brandon Hill and Peter Chang, they have worked with a family of hand-picked artists, designers and brands that share their vision. They help their collaborators deliver a get-it-done, DIY, art-centric, design-savvy, multi-disciplinary, cross-cultural, adaptable, niche, custom, force-multiplying, over-the-top authentic experience.
NoMüNoMü is an intersectional artist collective and curatorial platform in Washington, D.C., working toward liberation from the perpetual systems of oppression and class domination that permeate throughout the art world. NoMüNoMü was cofounded by Joseph Orzal, a Filipino Mexican American artist, curator and serial collaborator from Washington. He received his Bachelor of Fine Art from the Corcoran College of the Art in 2010 and has been actively exhibiting since then. Orzal is currently an Master of Fine Art candidate for curatorial practice at the Maryland Institute College of Art. His works combine physical and emotional observations of the human state and mine the palpable yet unspoken intricacies of racial, sexual and class distinctions in Western societies.
SUPERWAXX first developed an interest and talent in art as a child. Her work is heavily influenced by animated cartoons, comic books, popular culture and street art. Often using vibrant colors and fine-line painting techniques, Superwaxx is better known for her collective works that display her signature style while incorporating a cartoon-like aesthetic to narrate various subjects and topics often pertaining to historical or personal events. Since the sprouting of her professional career in as an artist, she has exhibited artwork in Boston, New York City, Miami and Cuba. She has also worked in collaboration with acclaimed internationally renowned artists and art institutions such as the Smithsonian. Superwaxx is a native of Richmond, Virginia, currently creating and residing in Washington, D.C.