Rage Against Art - Yellow Band Aid

Many artists have been known to destroy their own work… From Michelangelo to Monet to Jasper Johns and most recently, Banksy. Sometimes the motivations are known, such as with Johns, who famously wanted to stop becoming an artist and simply be one. Other times, such as with Georgia O’Keeffe or Banksy we’re left wondering what exactly the motivation was. Whatever their motivations, whatever their tools, from sledgehammers to fire to knives to paper shredders, at the end of the day something is different. The work is gone, damaged or simply changed. Indeed, in Banksy’s case the piece (Girl with Balloon) was half shredded, but then skyrocketed in value! Of course sometimes other people destroy an artist’s work. It could be rage, it could be revenge, it could even be for insurance! Whatever the reason, it’s one thing for someone to destroy someone else’s art… after all, they didn’t pour their hearts into making it. It wasn’t their sweat and sensibilities that went into creating it. They didn’t argue themselves into knots trying to decide whether it was finished or not. For them, it’s just art, and there’s no shortage of artists! It’s another thing all together to destroy your own work… and with all due respect to Michelangelo et. al, I’m not so brave as to actually destroy my art. As such, I’ve created a series of NFTs destroying various pieces of my art, if only digitally. This NFT is called Rage Against Art – Yellow Band Aid, and the manner of destruction is getting dammed up by a beaver! Yellow Band Aid is a 41” X 40.5” X 4.5” mixed media on wood piece I did back in 2020. It’s named Yellow Band Aid because when I was going back and forth as to whether or not I was actually finished with the piece there was something bothering me. After a while I figured out it was a spot of exposed wood with a bit of stenciled spray paint I just didn’t like. I tried a couple of things and settled on the circular yellow ball that now sits there. The yellow was a band aid that covered something I didn’t like. Voila… Yellow Band Aid! As of today Yellow Band Aid is available for sale on 1st Dibs and can be found here: https://www.1stdibs.com/art/paintings/abstract-paintings/vince-coyner-yellow-band-aid-2020-acrylic-spray-paint-on-wood/id-a_6655142/
Token
1stDibs.2
Token ID
158
Token Standard
ERC-721
Edition
1/1
Medium
MP4 Digital Video
Dimensions
1294 x 954
Artwork CID: QmYix53NtosCXbUyrSjf6sb6C8yDc6Jf2E81MXYzMFDCxf
Token Metadata CID: Qmeq2ddtFK8qhobhBB5ohrLRsmbauXyVr6yW19SLKY73CL
I'm an artist. I am a creator. I am a lover of color and texture and a fan of Bouguereau, Van Gogh, Mondrian, Lichtenstein, Pollack, Peter Max, Sol LeWitt and countless others. For me creating art is what I imagine an LSD trip might be like, suspension of life's framework, no rules no limits, no map to follow, just going where your whims take you and usually being delighted when you get there. That trip finds its clearest expression in NFTs, where there are literally no boundaries, no definitions and no prior restraint. NFTs, the direct descendants of Duchamp’s revolutionary “Fountain”, involve creation in the truest sense of the word. There’s not canvas you have to start with. No palette you have to stick with. There are no brushes or pigments and even gravity offers no constraint. The rocket ship of NFT art is just lifting off and its journey will no doubt be a wonder to behold. To the degree that we I am able to be a part of that journey, I count myself fortunate.

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