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FACES FROM THE BLOCK - THE BRAZILIAN BRONX CONNECTION


FACES FROM THE BLOCK - The Brazilian Bronx Connection.

Faces from the Block is an 8-year collaboration between South Bronx Puerto Rican photographer Ricky Flores and Brazilian artists Izolag and Ananda Nahu. It was born by happenstance when the Brazilian artists found Flores’s work on Flickr, a online social media photo sharing site around 2008. They quickly became fascinated with his work and began incorporating some of the images in a series of paintings representing cultures from around the world. It was during this period of time a collaborative process was developed with the goal of creating a joint exhibition and murals here on the streets of the South Bronx. The collaboration is an explosive and loving interpretation of the residents of the South Bronx through the eyes of Izolag and Ananda. They depict friends and family from his youth, seen through the lens of time and distance based on the stories Izolag and Ananda heard in Brazil about life in the South Bronx during the fire years of the 60s that ended in the wasteland of the 80’s.

The body of photographs resonated with their own experiences of life in the streets of Bahia and Rio de Janeiro and they were inSpired by the resiliency of the people of the South Bronx and their influence in art, music, dance and culture and the birth of the Hip Hop movement.The body of artwork that Izolag and Ananda created from Flores’photography range from line drawings, fine art paintings and large murals created with stencils and filled out with warm colors of the tropics and laced throughout with textile patterns influenced by cultures from Africa and the Orient.

The exhibition will take place at BronxArtSpace at 305 E 140thSt 1A, Bronx, New York City

from July 8th - through August 8, 2015.

The Artist Talk will take place on August 6 at 6 pm.

Gallery contact number is 718-401-8144

Gallery hours are Wed-Sat, 12pm-6:30pm

www.bronxartspace.com

art@bronxartspace.com

RICKY FLORES

Ricky Flores was born in New York to Puerto Rican parents in 1961. His

father,Pastor Flores, a merchant seaman, and his mother,Ana Luisa Flores, a garment worker, lived in the Tremont section of the Bronx during the early 60’s. Flores' father died in 1965 from bronchial asthma and his mother moved the family to Longwood section of the Bronx , where he was raised.

Flores started documenting life in the South Bronx after he purchased a camera with a small inheritance he received from his father in 1980. It started a journey of self-discovery born out of photographing the lives of his friends and family during one of the most turbulent times in the history of Bronx and New York City. Over the years Flores free-lanced for The Daily News, The

New York Times, The City Sun and The Village Voice. Flores was recognized for his coverage of the attacks on World Trade Center on September 11, 2001

and is a two time winner of the New York Press Publishers Association for Spot News. He has a permanent installation at I.S. 206 in the Tremont section of the Bronx commissioned by the School Construction Authority New York City Board of Education and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs. He is currently a staff photographer for The Journal News in Westchester, New York.

.

IZOLAG

Izolag was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1983. He became in terested in drawing as a child in the interior of Bahia where he lived until his teens. During that time, he devoted himself to humanitarian work, worked in organizations that helped the poorest members of the community to fight hunger and child malnutrition. Along with the community workers, he helped people put in simple and effective practices to improve food quality and sanitation, as well as participated actively in conservation groups that taught ecological awareness and sustainable living.

He studied fine arts at the Federal University of Bahia, and there deepened his

knowledge of graffiti, stencil, poster and the calligraphy art form. He took to the streets and made large stencils refining his techniques. He developed various styles of calligraphy, from the most classic to modern, creating his own style. He has become a pioneer in the stencil art form in Brazil and is known for creating large murals using this technique filling out the work with multiple layers of color. The images take on a life-like quality. He recently broke the world record when he created a stencil measuring 50 by 20 meters. A large portion of his work is based on children living in conditions of risk, living in shelters and on the streets. He has partnered with social activists and photographers from around the world to help these children and workers to build a better future. Izolag has sold hundreds of paintings across Europe, collectors include corporations, European prisons, and various galleries spread across the world.

About Izolag:

www.izolagarmeidah.com

www.facebook.com/izolag

About Ricky Flores:

http://rickyflores.com/

http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/15/raw-and-real-in

side-the-south-bronx/?_r=0http://www.seisdelsur.com/

About Firme Forte Records ( When Izolag and Ananda Nahu works together for Art productions )

www.firmeforterecords.com

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