Russell Young (artist)

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Russell Young
Spouse
(m. 1992; div. 2021)
Children3
Websitewww.russellyoung.com

Russell Young (born 13 March 1959) is a British-American artist best known for large silkscreen paintings using imagery drawn from recent history and popular culture. Young's artistic output includes painting, screen printing, sculpture, installations and film.[1]

Life

Young studied photography, film and graphic design at the

Brand New Heavies to Eartha Kitt.[2]

In September 2000, while living in

Miami, Florida
. He lives and works in
New York and California.

Career

Sid Vicious, 2001, 48 x 60 inches, silkscreen on canvas

During the 1990s Young gave up photography and directing altogether and started to paint seriously. In 1998 he relocated to New York, rented a studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and worked on a series of ‘Combine Paintings’, assemblages of collage, found objects and street graffiti. In 2001, he began the series called 'Pig Portraits'. He had acquired the mugshots of musicians, actors and political figures and he blew them up as bold, colorful, silkscreen, portraits of Sid Vicious, Elvis Presley, Jane Fonda, Malcolm X, Steve McQueen, Frank Sinatra and Lee Harvey Oswald. "They were meant to be anti-celebrity portraits. To take a dig at my former career I guess. As a release. But they ended up–I think they look better than they do in some of the sessions."[3] He first showed the Pig Portraits at Don O'Melveny Gallery in Los Angeles in 2003.[4]

After 9/11 Young and his family returned to California. In 2005 he showed his Fame+Shame series with the Art of Elysium at Menotti Gallery in Los Angeles, documenting the fallout from the cultural excess of previous decades.

Young began to use diamond dust in 2007. He called the paintings Dirty Pretty Things, pressing the crystals into the web pigment of the images of his paintings. In 2008 he showed many of these at the Kessler Gallery in Southampton, New York as Diamond Dust. He used this process in his well known series, Marilyn Crying, showed at the Halcyon Gallery in London in 2016.[5][6]

Young became very ill and almost died in February 2010. He was in a coma for 8 days brought on by

death of Meredith Hunter
, over and over, in a series of abstractions. Helter Skelter was shown at SCOPE Miami in 2014 by Bankrobber London.

The Goss-Michael Foundation in

council estates in the deprived areas of Britain: Thorntree, Nant Peris, the Gorbals.[7] An idea he borrows from Joy Division naming themselves for the sexual slavery rooms of nazi concentration camps, told of in the House of Dolls.[8]

Young began two large series of abstract works in 2011. In the Fight of the Paso del Mar, he threw the dust of metals into wet, black pigment and sprayed them with sea water and rain to allow the metals to rust and turn colors. He named them for his favorite surf breaks along the California coast. In Dreamland, he poured paint on the floor and printed it onto linen, building up atmospheric scapes with the names of atomic bomb tests. He showed his Fight of the Paso del Mar and Dreamland paintings at Bankrobber London in 2013.

In honor of Pelé, Young did a screen print in 2015.[9]

In October 2018, Russell Young Superstar, opened at the Modern Art Museum Shanghai, a former coal bunker along the banks of the Huangpu River. It is the most extensive survey of his work to date and introducing his 5-year project West.[10]

Charitable work

Young is an active supporter [11] of The Art Of Elysium, an organization empowering artists and communities of need to join together and emotionally triumph over their circumstances through art. In 2016 Russell Young received the Spirit of Elysium award from Vivienne Westwood and Andreas Kronthaler in recognition of their charitable enterprises using art as a catalyst for social change.[12]

References

External links