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TRANSFORMER presents:
Itsy Bitsy Bollocks
Mr. Eggs, Mark Jenkins, Travis Millard,
and Kelly Towles
Itsy Bitsy Bollocks is a site-responsive, collaborative exhibition featuring drawing, painting, sculpture
and mixed media installation by Mr. Eggs (Manchester, England), Mark Jenkins (Washington, DC),
Travis Millard (Los Angeles, CA) and Kelly Towles (Washington, DC). Influenced by skate and
punk culture, graffiti, comic book art, and pop art, each artist's work has a distinct visual style that
comments on urban life, current political and pop culture news and issues, as well as personal
anecdotes that convey the laughable and mockable in humanity and society.
The artists in Itsy Bitsy Bollocks choose to present their work in a multitude of urban settings to allow
for immediate and unrestricted viewer response. Presenting similar bodies of work within the context
of Transformer's store-front project space, Itsy Bitsy Bollocks encourages dialogue around what
constitutes fine art - the work itself or the context in which it is presented?
Evolving from the one night Bollocks event organized by Kelly Towles in 2005 at Adamson Gallery
(the commercial gallery who represents Towles) - an artistic intervention and convention of sorts that
featured the raffling of free works by over 100 'street' artists - Itsy Bitsy Bollocks furthers the
relationship of four emerging artists and their work through a curated exploration of their playful yet
defiant street art aesthetics. With their art work presented both outside and inside the gallery space,
the artists in Itsy Bitsy Bullocks bridge their rebellious street art-making processes and keenly tuned
contemporary and graphic art sensibilities creating a unique exhibition at Transformer that highlights
the irreverent humor each of these artists brings to their work.
Mr. Eggs "tries to stay anonymous and stay away from the glitz and glam that some of today's street
artists have come accustomed to. Very little is known of this artist apart from what is told around the
streets and local bars. Mr. Eggs work consists of humorous and odd statements that sometimes
leave the viewer bewildered and confused to the point where they just start to smile and giggle ever
so slightly to themselves, this sometimes leads the general public into a frenzy of 'I must try and take
this piece of art home with me; I love it,' and then try to peel, unscrew or even pick up the artwork that
has been left for the whole of the general public to enjoy.
Most of the artist's nights are filled with climbing walls with his ninja chicken like skills and scaling
crazy insane heights to place his work for the world to see. One such case was that of the recent
Banksy "Cruder Oils" show in London, UK where Mr. Eggs single handedly infiltrated Banksy's gallery,
evading the security and the masses of Banksy fans outside waiting to enter the venue, to stick-up his
own painting which then stayed up for the entire duration of the show. The 'Eggie Magritte' that it has now been labeled, has pride and place in the POW headquarters in London waiting for pick up. The
very illusive Eggs has also managed to adjust and recreate some of Banksy's work into his own, thus
making a new kind of evolution in the street art scene. In a quote by the artist over heard in the Black
Cat bar, 'I just want to paint the town yellow and make folk smile and if I have to break a few eggs
along the way, well I guess that's what's got to happen. It beats doing a 9 to 5 job and gets my work
more appreciated by the people'." www.mreggs.com
Mark Jenkins figurative tape sculptures and tape casts of urban objects have been seen on street
corners, in parks, and other public settings. Using clear packing tape as his primary material, Mark
creates playful figures and scenarios in unexpected locations pushing ironic sensibilities. About his
chosen materials Mark states, "with packing tape I can walk up to a parking meter, fire hydrant or
mailbox and rip a cast of it in a matter of minutes. I can't think of another casting medium that would
allow me to do this. I also like clear tape sculpture for street installations because it's highly reflective
and translucent. It stands out in cityscapes in a way that's otherworldly." In creating an artist
statement about his work, Mark writes: "when the Good Humor truck comes, the kids laugh and
scream; they don't even know why. I guess it's because they're going to eat ice cream and too, the
truck plays its tune loud escalating the mood like a Pavlov effect. I'd like my art to be this captivating
to kids, and make adults the same. You can't eat tape but you can eat art. 2006 is Year of the Stork."
www.storker.net/tapesculpture.html
Travis Millard is an accomplished artist whose work has been presented along with artists Shepard
Fairy and Jeremey Fish among many others. Travis is also the proprietor of Fudge Factory
Comics, headquartered in Los Angeles, CA. "Fudge Factory Comics specializes in common archaic
scribbles, doodle awing, zine making, funny stories, product design, animation, installation, and local
sunflower seed distance spitting champion. Travis Fudge makes no acts of aggression against his
neighbors and makes no attempts to harness nuclear power for anything other than peaceful means."
www.fudgefactorycomics.com
Kelly Towles graduated from the University of Maryland with a fine arts degree. About his work Kelly
states, "social isolation and emotional captivity are two of the major things that I comment on with my
work; people dealing with the society we live in, and the emotional arsenal that each person is
equipped with. Dark humor and twisted features cast most of the characters that I create."
www.kellytowles.com
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