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From poetry to animation, from graphics to 3D work, from textile and
wallpaper to paintings, graphic artist Geoff McFetridge has complete
control over these widely divergent disciplines. In the past ten years,
Los Angeles-based McFetridge has created in his free work and in his
commissions a unique imagery, which is detailed and abstract at the
same time. Full of hands and teeth, objects and animals, skaters and
bikers.
“As a graphic artist, you’re sort of
swimming in a void. It’s really simple to make cool stuff, there’s so
much cool stuff going round day in day out that it’s getting boring.”
Geoff McFetridge sees himself as a merchant in icons. “Take the Yeti.
I’ve made dozens of them over the years. In fact, I have reduced the
bigfoot to virtually nothing. Even so, no matter how I keep reducing
the image, it remains recognizable. That’s how I attract people; then I
give it all a twist and start playing the perception game.
Bend the Void is Geoff McFetridge's
second Book for Nieves after All Smiles Have Teeth in 2005.
Born in Canada, but trained at the
California Institute of the Arts, McFetridge won public acclaim as a
designer when he was still a student. For two years, he was art
director of the famous underground Beastie Boys magazine Grand Royal.
Since then he has worked for numerous clients ranging from Nike, Pepsi,
and Stüssy to Burton, Girl and 2K/Gingham. He made clips for
Plaid, Simian, and recently also for The Whitest Boy Alive, and he
created film title sequences for The Virgin Suicides and Adaptation. He
is one of the Beautiful Losers, and makes solo exhibitions from Los
Angeles to Paris and from London to Tokyo. Bend the Void. The Space
between Yeah and Yes is his first large solo exhibition in the
Netherlands.
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