SURVIVAL THINGS: WORKS OF A NATIVE NEW YORKER

SURVIVAL THINGS: WORKS OF A NATIVE NEW YORKER

12 rue Vivienne Paris, 75002, France Friday, February 12, 2021–Friday, April 30, 2021 Opening Reception: Friday, February 12, 2021, 1 p.m.–11 p.m.

Survival Things: Works of a Native New Yorker

solo show with Michael Alan

safari refuge by michael alan

Michael Alan

Safari Refuge, 2012

Sold

serenity by michael alan

Michael Alan

Serenity, 2020

2,900 USD

sticks & stones in my head by michael alan

Michael Alan

Sticks & Stones in my Head, 2021

2,400 USD

gumby explodes by michael alan

Michael Alan

Gumby Explodes, 2020

2,400 USD

new ideas by michael alan

Michael Alan

New Ideas, 2021

1,200 USD

buck naked by michael alan

Michael Alan

Buck Naked, 2020

500 USD

morning jitters by michael alan

Michael Alan

Morning Jitters, 2020

3,600 USD

snow storm by michael alan

Michael Alan

Snow Storm, 2009

3,600 USD

help by michael alan

Michael Alan

Help, 2020

Not Available

bernie & child by michael alan

Michael Alan

Bernie & Child, 2020

2,800 USD

shaman by michael alan

Michael Alan

Shaman, 2020

3,000 USD

review board by michael alan

Michael Alan

Review Board, 2020

2,900 USD

In a time where America questions power and systems American artist, Michael Alan stands in the forefront, asking the questions that challenge, loudly and boldly, over and over. A painter for the people, he creates works that address racism, corruption, poverty, greed, and control.

Michael Alan sees and paints the world his own way, with an alternative vision of the ongoing, overall human feeling. Alan, inspired by his surroundings, growing up and living in NYC, paints the fast paced menacing life of his city. A physically disabled son of an immigrant family, he has seen a lot, been through a lot, and puts it all into the work. The way he sees and interprets life is unlike other visions in art. The work defies a type or a group or a style. This work leads us into a new ocean that invites us all, looking to redefine who we are as Americans. 

Alan works around the clock, creating a visual language and a modern day commentary, trying to understand the absurd world we live in. The artist is attracted to mediums that traditionally don't mix, but collide to create their own worlds. Using a broad range of tools, handmade brushes, his hands and fingers, split tips of pens, and repurposed drawings, he is constantly exploring mark making techniques to make odd lines and marks with obscure color combinations. His work is a mixture of high-end art on fire that is burned down to the ground, waiting for we the people to touch and grab.

He sees his visual works as puzzles that can be broken down and reconstructed by the eye. They are meant to be looked at, and reevaluated over time. Speaking on many popular and unpopular topics, he paints all sorts of people, places, and things, with a range of commentary in his work as a work within itself. He is known for street art activism, punk performance, standing for individuality, equality, positivity, freedom, wackiness and acceptance and questioning and challenging the systems that have all the power and control. Alan is a strong believer in the constitutional right of freedom of speech, and his work portrays this.  

Alan is known for his masked performances around NYC, long before Covid-19 and the mask mandate. He created the performance art project The Living Installation. It is a staple icon of the city, which he runs with his wife and partner Jadda Cat. Together they stand for living in the moment, the power of the body as living sculptures, the power of being alive, appreciation of life, and comment on the absurdity we go through as humans. 

You can see in Michael’s paintings and drawings that he is inspired by the performances and costumes. The performances inform the drawings and drawings inform the performances. They are worlds inside worlds.

Alan creates like an unbreakable renaissance artist working on a painting with a broken sewing machine, looking through a window filled with war.