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Steve Kaufman
and his mission: Keeping the pop in Pop Art
By John Terlesky
Special to the Morning Call
Pop Art, with its numbing repetition, disregard for conventional
standards of technique and use of mundane objects for subject
matter, achieved much of its curious power from an inherent
irony: Coke bottles and blown-up comic strips were not what
you expected from the usually high-minded art world.
The ironic thing about Steve Kaufman - who once assisted the
genre's best known purveyor, Andy Warhol, and who is looked
upon in some circles as his successor- is the complete absence
of irony in his work. His brightly colored silk-screen paintings
seem to celebrate familiar icons - subjects include Warhol staples
Marilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley, as well as Warner Bros. Cartoon
characters and super heroes - without any distancing reservations.
"What people don't realize," suggests Kaufman, 40,
during an interview from his studio in Los Angeles, "is
that, actually, pop art' is popular culture."
You can judge for yourself when Kaufman makes a personal appearance
6-9 p.m. Thursday at Bethlem's Contemporary Fine Arts gallery
to unveil a new series of his works featuring his take on the
Frank Sinatra mug shot used for the cover of a recent best-seller.
To Kaufman, the "pop" in Pop Art really does stand
for "popular" in the broadest sense of the term. Brought
up on the rough streets of the South Bronx, the artist has the
kind of common touch in both conversation and his work that
indicates an instinctual disdain for high-brow conceptualizing-the
bread and butter of most contemporary art.
"I used to be a comic book artist," recounts Kaufman,
"and it's kind of funny to take comic books and bring them
into the fine art world, where these traditional people who
believe they know what art should be say, "Well, that's
not art." And then you meet other people who say, "I
love this, man. Spiderman or Superman was my childhood thing,
and I wouldn't think of anything else to put on my wall."
Not just comic book fans have come to appreciate Kaufman's work.
Among those who own paintings are Al Pacino, Elizabeth Taylor
and John Travolta, and the artist was recently commissioned
to do a portrait of Vincent Van Gogh, a job that was accompanied
by some vindication. "For the so-called critics, who stand
there and say this is not real art, well, the Van Gogh Museum
in Amsterdam seems to have accepted it," he observes with
satisfaction.
Kaufman is clearly derivative of Warhol." We all start
somewhere," he admits. "I take it as a compliment
and always will." But he insists that he is going the late
artist-some of whose works he was commissioned to finish-one
step further, by employing more than just the stark images lifted
from photographs that made Warhol famous. " The work I
do now is on the cutting edge," he contends. "Like
the Mona Lisa, that's a standard portrait. Even Warhol's portraits
are a standard one-head shot. I do more of a collage and throw
things together.
Keeping with the non-elitist spirit of his work, Kaufman enlists
the aid of LA gang members, some straight out of prison, in
producing his paintings, a practice that both acknowledge his
own past and provides future rewards.
"I could have easily hired kids from college. But those
kids could have easily found jobs on their own," Kaufman
says. "These kids are the ones that get in trouble and
have no place to go. When you see a kid go on to good things,
you can't put a price on that."
A sort of "surrogate Warhol"-an idea that would have
probably amused the man who built his career on a catty sense
of interchangeability - Kaufman has come to hobnob with the
same cognoscenti that were his former boss's chief patrons.
But the painter bristles at the suggestion of his own notoriety
being an important part of his work's appeal.
"That's the
furthest thing from my brain," Kaufman says dismissive.
"I do not even think of myself as a celebrity. Eight hours
a day I'm around homeless people and gang kids."
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All images are copyright from 1993 to 2008, and Trademark, all images are licensed, 151 licensed by photos and estates, CMG, Marilyn Monroe estate, James Dean estate, Frank Sinatra, Elivs estate, Corbis, Warner Brothers, Disney, Coca Cola, Marvel comics, Mickey Mantle, Old Movie poster Inc, Exotic cars Inc, MTV, VH -1, Jimmy Hendrix voda, Pespi, Apple, Muhammad Ali, M Benz, Ferrari, BMW & Nascar.
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