Shepard Fairey Dodges the CopsBy William Hanley
Published: August 24, 2007
NEW YORK—One night in June, one of Shepard Fairey’s assistants scaled a low-rise New York building with a bucket of paste and a poster under his arm. But just before he got to his task—affixing a Fairey-designed work one flight above street level—a security guard spotted him and came running. The assistant, a seasoned installer of illicit artwork, indicated he was leaving the premises without trouble, but the guard tried to physically restrain him anyway and punches were thrown. The night ended with the would-be installer fleeing down the street, bucket and poster still in hand. Assisting an artist can mean a lot of different things—the position can be an opportunity to work side-by-side with a role model or a nine-to-five administrative grind—but for a few of Fairey’s employees, the job has the unusual demand of working on the wrong side of the law. "I always tell my assistants," said Fairey, who has been arrested some 13 times while installing his work, "unless you are willing to go to jail—particularly in New York, where they have a really good undercover vandal squad—don't go out with me." Fairey, who was installing a solo show at a Brooklyn project space run by Jonathan LeVine Gallery the night his assistant was nearly apprehended, owes his current popularity to street art. He got his start in 1989, when, as a student at the Rhode Island School of Design, he created stickers and posters bearing stylized portraits of the professional wrestler Andre the Giant (who died in 1993). Over the next decade, Fairey positioned this signature image in public spaces all over the world. Eventually carrying the cryptically menacing slogan "OBEY" and rendered in a style that apes Constructivist propaganda, it became a globally recognized icon. Now 37, Fairey has evolved a style that is still heavily graphic, but more complex. He has also expanded his practice to include commercial commissions for high-profile clients—including a poster for the Oscar-winning film Walk the Line and an advertorial for Adidas—founded the lifestyle magazine Swindle, started his own clothing line, and also made a name for himself in the mainstream art world, creating one-off and editioned works sold in galleries and included in exhibitions at major museums, such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Victoria & Albert Museum. To crank out his more commercial work, Fairey employs a staff of six graphic designers at his Los Angeles design firm, Studio Number One, as well as a team of interns who not only handle the dirty work of refining hand-drawn borders, photographs, and other elements in the artist's signature hard-edge compositions but also offer creative input. Yet when it comes to his fine art, Fairey controls the process more tightly. He begins his gallery-bound pieces at the design studio, where he transfers sketched concepts onto stencils and silk-screen film, and then completes them by hand at a second, smaller studio in his garage with help from Jason Filipow, his assistant of four years.
Still a Street Kid With the stakes much higher than those at an average studio job, most of Fairey's street assistants have been recruited from among his friends. "There's a lot of risk involved," he says. "Usually somebody is not going to take that kind of risk unless it's for something that they feel passionate about." Though not a street artist himself, Stuart Noble nevertheless began helping Fairey years ago, scouting locations for his work all over London. Now based in Los Angeles, he regularly assists Fairey on street art projects and helps in a more official capacity in the studio. Another co-conspirator, Dan Flores, roomed with one of Fairey's employees and then volunteered to go out and put up work himself. Both Noble and Flores regularly travel with Fairey to assist with curbside installations, and they have a street-honed sense of the risks involved and an understanding of how not to get caught.
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