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Collier's
Corner
By Lynn Collier
Prince of Pop Art hits the streets
Pop art
icon Steve Kaufman wasn't always attending Las Vegas champagne charity
events and traveling the globe with his artwork of celebrities,
cigars and his mentor Andy Warhol's signature Campbell 's Soup cans.
At the age of 16 a New York judge sentenced him to clean 15 subway
cars for spray painting graffiti on public property. The judge upped
it to 187 subway cars after he caught young rebel Kaufman decorating
the Judge’s home with the F word in retaliation for the harsh
sentence of 15 subway cars.
"My father died when I was four and I was always getting in
trouble, if you know what I mean," said Kaufman, who now lives
and works in East Los Angeles.
The young, scrappy kid from the Bronx ended up participating in
a weekend program at a correctional center making frames and stretching
canvas for an old art dealer. "He
had a cane and a big dog and he was always yelling at all of us
kids," Kaufman, now 41, recalled. "That's exactly what
is happening to me now, only now they consider me the old guy."
The artist, who has garnered scores of world-wide awards for his
unique approach to painting hires young men and teens with criminal
records to build his frames, mix his paint and clean his studio.
He has helped 975 kids to get off the streets and into some kind
of honest work.
"We have a 85 percent success rate," Kaufman said. "Kids
go on to rebuild their lives. Not all go into art, some go into
contracting, they even become police officers after their record
is wiped clean."
He said he's trying to give other kids the same chance he got
more than 20 years ago.
The successful pop artist said it would be easier to hire college
art students. He wouldn't have to worry about talking to parole
officers & Judges. But those kids aren't the ones who need
him.
"We hire kids that nobody else wants," Kaufman said.
"These kids are ex-gang kids. One of my kids was arrested
for attempted murder. Nicest kid in the world. But he was probably
just being nice to me. People come in here and say they have total
respect for these guys in here, but they never want to meet them
down the block."
He wants to bring that idea to Las Vegas. He spends every other
weekend here painting murals on the construction wall at Caesars
Palace, hanging his work at Centaur Sculpture Galleries and autographing
his famed portraits of Frank Sinatra, Marylin Monroe and Muhammad
Ali at Park Place Entertainment hotel-casinos, such as Paris Las
Vegas.
Currently, he is asking the City of Las Vegas and the state of
Nevada for funds and
land near a correctional center so he can spend $1 million of
his own money building
an art studio that would put young men to work making frames for
art projects that would be sold at local galleries and hotel-casinos.
Meanwhile, this September he will meet with President Bush at
the George Hotel in Washington D.C. to dedicate his "September
11 Memorial piece" that was unveiled at The Forum Shops in
Caesars Palace on November 6, 2001. The 15-foot by-40-foot
mural has traveled around the country for the past year and has
collected more than one million signatures. It just arrived from
New York City to Kaufman's studio.
Ultimately, Kaufman said this piece would be housed in the Smithsonian.
Kaufman's working on a larger version of the artwork to wrap around
Yankee Stadium. Kaufman, who is the official Yankee artist, said
while he's in New York he'll appear on the Howard Stern radio
show, which has expressed interest in broadcasting live from the
stadium as the piece is being installed.
At Caesars there is a 450-foot-by-25-foot mural depicting famed
160 world champion boxing matches and legendary performers such
George Burns and Sinatra. Celine Dion, who opens the Coliseum
in March, ends the long line of entertainers. Kaufman said he
will add a reproduction of Evel Knievel's motorcycle, which the
daredevil used to jump over the Strip Hotel's fountains in 1967,
to the wall mural in early September. Kaufman said the work would
ultimately be 700 feet long by 20 feet high.
And he's not finished drawing on the walls of the luxury Strip
hotel-casino.
He said he's asked Park Place, which owns Caesars Palace, if he
can paint a history of the 36-year-old property on the three-block-long
outside construction wall. He expects an answer this fall.
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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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