PSA: ANIMAL Q&A with J. Ivcevich, “Cultural Bricolager”


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J. Ivcevich is one of those artists that is so talented that he doesn’t need to tell you his first name. The “J.” stands alone all by itself. He was born in Indiana but has relocated to the industrial paradises of Brooklyn. He creates his art using digital images mixed with paint and resin (no not the residue in the bong). His recreations of graffiti, gas pumps, and barbed wire are just sublime. He uses big words to describe his work like “cultural bricolage.” For the more layman among you, “bricolage” means “DIY.” And he doesn’t stop there, J. describes his process as a “juxtapostion blender,“ declaring, “Images of rural pastures, urban deterioration, mid-American mediocrity, rusting industrial artifacts, and isolated trailer park splendor all get thrown in the juxtaposition blender.” He agreed to answer all our questions and show us “bricolage” in action.



introimagePumped I.jpg

click image to continue reading Q&A
J. Ivcevich is one of those artists that is so talented that he doesn’t need to tell you his first name. The “J.” stands alone all by itself. He was born in Indiana but has relocated to the industrial paradises of Brooklyn. He creates his art using digital images mixed with paint and resin (no not the residue in the bong). His recreations of graffiti, gas pumps, and barbed wire are just sublime. He uses big words to describe his work like “cultural bricolage.” For the more layman among you, “bricolage” means “DIY.” And he doesn’t stop there, J. describes his process as a “juxtapostion blender,“ declaring, “Images of rural pastures, urban deterioration, mid-American mediocrity, rusting industrial artifacts, and isolated trailer park splendor all get thrown in the juxtaposition blender.” He agreed to answer all our questions and show us “bricolage” in action.


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