Kyle Sherard and Rachael Inch

“They’re not murals,” Dustin Spagnola says. Spagnola’s pieces have been popping up on buildings all over town, but he calls them “large-scale public works,” a “middle ground between graffiti and corporate advertising.” They often tackle a single topic or portray one person within a tight range of color, usually black and white.

The Lexington Avenue Gateway is the type of mural you stop and look at for a while. Spagnola’s work is the kind that burns into your brain in seconds (hence the advertising aspect). The graffiti reference is thinly attached to the stock revolutionary figures he has put up in the past two years. His imagery is visually similar to Shepard Fairey-style wheat pastes and simplified graffiti forms, but otherwise, it could be called minimalism. And minimalism is effective in getting a point across. 

While hanging his work in 2010 at the DeSoto Lounge, Spagnola asked about the patio wall out back. After getting the go-ahead, he painted his first pseudo-mural, a portrait of Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata. From there he began painting around town. The Prospect invited him to paint a mural (this one, which features Marilyn Monroe, definitely is a mural) on the side of its wall. Spagnola combined a few film stills from 1961’s The Misfits. 

He’s painted an image of Crazy Horse on Lexington Avenue, Bob Moog on Haywood Road and, more recently, the Bush and Obama mask painting, also on Lexington.

That painting, an image of President Bush holding a President Obama mask, is now on its third life cycle. It lasted for 24 hours at the Arcade, then a few weeks on Forever Tattoo. Back in December, during Art Basel, Spagnola traveled to Miami, where he painted the image on a 22-foot wall with an American flag background. 

Spagnola’s met some harsh criticism for the simplicity, content and the method of his work (he paints using projected, borrowed images). The work is often temporary, and when one gets painted over, Spagnola considers it part of the process. He keeps it simple: “It’s not always about the talent; this work is about using a space to flex an idea.”

Art Gypsy Tales featured interview

1) Home or Away?
Away
2) Who are you + What is your message through creation?
I'm Dustin Spagnola. I make large scale political portraiture.
My message is make the world better; there are other ways to exist. I express my own beliefs through what I do. It is possible to positively influence the outside world with imagery. You can teach people + ask them to question ideas.

3) Your first artistic encounter?
I've drawn for as long as I can remember. My mother always encouraged me to draw. I remember drawing on the walls in the stairway of my grandmother's house + sketching cartoons (Heman, Thundercats, G.I Joe...). I later moved to comic books. When most children stop drawing, I found myself doing it more + more. I didn't get in trouble for painting or drawing. I was quiet, staying inside. My mom didn't have to worry about me.

4) Where is your most inspirational place?
Inspiration might be the top of a mountain in a cow pasture in North Carolina or a beach in Florida.

5) What is the first step in your creative process?
The first step in my creative process is painting my surface white. Turning whatever environment into a blank + clean canvas.  I use walls as my primary medium. 
Currently the intent of my work is to affect the viewing audience. I'm not really interested in being considered by people who want to look at artwork + judge it on its artistic merit. I am much more interested in reaching the general public. I consider what I do to be the middle ground between corporate advertising + graffiti. I like to work legally. I like to reach people + influence them to consider my point of view.   

6) What are you working on at the moment? Any exciting future projects?
Recently I've been painting pictures of dead pigs. About to get new panels for upcoming body of work.


7) Your favorite work? Why? 
Most likely my Bush holding Obama mask in front of American flag (above). I've made a few different versions of this image. When I got to Miami this past Art Basel (Dec.2011), I ended up with this 22 foot tall wall, so decided to make a huge American flag. I feel like it was the missing piece to bring the image together.

8) Your fantasized collaboration (dead or alive)?
Ishmael was a collaboration I never thought I would get to do. But then met him, he ended up being the coolest + most humble person.


9) What is success for you?
Success is making art + having other people consider it. Affecting the outside world with imagery is amazing.

10) If you could pack only one thing in your suitcase, what would it be?
My jacket.

11) What would you imagine your last words to be?
 I don't have to do anything except breathe until I die. Everything else is my choice.