Dave Van Ronk Portrait Steve Keene Painting #61

USA, 2022

16 x 19 in (41 x 48 cm)

ID #MagnetWall-L-02-DUP

A portrait of folk singer Dave Van Ronk, known in New York City's Greenwich Village scene in the 1960s, where he was nicknamed the "Mayor of MacDougal Street."

Called the "Assembly-Line Picasso" by Time magazine, artist Steve Keene has made it his mission to democratize the contemporary art world, one mass-produced, hand-painted painting at at a time. Keene started his art career by working collaboratively with rock bands, designing album covers, stage sets, and posters for bands like Pavement, Silver Jews, Dave Matthews Band, Soul Coughing, and many others. Keene has said, "I want buying my paintings to be like buying a CD: it's cheap, it's art, and it changes your life, but the object has no status. Musicians create something for the moment, something with no boundaries and that kind of expansiveness is what I want to come across in my work." Keene takes his art of the moment message seriously and will oftentimes move in and start painting on site when invited to show his work at museums and galleries. In this way, despite its mass-produced ethos, each Keene painting is one of a kind, a souvenir of the moment of production, of Keene's tireless efforts to redefine who does and doesn't get to participate in the art world. His works are highlighted in the recently produced book "The Steve Keene Art Book," produced by Daniel Efram. There, a variety of his pieces are showcased.

Year: 2022

Artist: Steve Keene

Material: Acrylic on plywood

100-250 acrylic folk art naive art original outside art painting recycled art size-16x19 wood

More from $100 to $250