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Wayne White (artist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wayne White
White in 2012
Born
Wayne Wilkes White

(1957-09-17) September 17, 1957 (age 67)
EducationMiddle Tennessee State University
Known forPainting, cinema
Notable workNixon (1998)
MovementSurrealism, pop art
SpouseMimi Pond
Children2
Websitewaynewhiteart.com

Wayne Wilkes White (born September 17, 1957) is an American painter, art director, puppeteer, set designer, animator, cartoonist and illustrator. He has won three Emmy Awards for his work.[1]

Early life and education

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In the documentary Beauty is Embarrassing, White says he was born in Sand Mountain, Alabama.

After graduating from Hixson High School[2] in Chattanooga, Tennessee (1975) and Middle Tennessee State University (BFA, 1979), White went to New York City (1980) and worked as a cartoonist and illustrator for a number of publications including The East Village Eye, Raw, The New York Times, and The Village Voice.

Career

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In 1986 he worked on Pee-wee's Playhouse where his work for his set and puppet designs won three Emmy awards; he also supplied a number of voices on the show. Other television credits include production and set design for Shining Time Station, Riders in the Sky, The Weird Al Show and Beakman's World.[3]

He art directed two seminal music videos, Peter Gabriel's "Big Time" in 1986, for which he won a Billboard award for best Art Direction in a music video, and in 1996 he designed all the Georges Méliès-inspired sets for the award-winning video for the Smashing Pumpkins "Tonight, Tonight".

More recently he has concentrated on his painting career. He takes cheap, mass-produced lithographs which he finds in secondhand thrift stores and painstakingly paints phrases or words on them in a glossy, 3-D style. His works have been compared to Ed Ruscha. Arguably, White's most famous work is his painting Nixon, which was featured on the cover of an album, also titled Nixon, by the band Lambchop. A school friend of Lambchop's Kurt Wagner, White has contributed to four of the band's album covers. On September 16, 2009 at The Modern Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas, White gave a presentation of his work through the retelling of his life.

In September 2009 White installed a large puppet head of George Jones in the Rice Gallery at Rice University in Houston, Texas. The puppet's eyes rotate in its head, and if the viewer pulls a rope, the mouth opens and a snoring noise emerges. A huge fan rotates at the base of the head, with the words "dreaming" written over the fan blades. The piece is called "Big Lectric Fan to Keep Me Cool While I Sleep," in reference to George Jones's recording of "Ragged but Right."[4]

In January 2009, White was featured at Marty Walker Gallery in Dallas, Texas in a group art exhibition titled There's something I've been meaning to tell you.... The Marty Walker Gallery also held a solo art exhibition for White in 2010 titled I fell 37 miles to the earth 100 years ago. In March 2012, Beauty Is Embarrassing, a documentary about Wayne White's life, premiered at SXSW in Austin, Texas. In June 2013 the interactive, site-specific installation HALO AMOK debuted at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art. White describes HALO AMOK as a "cubist cowboy rodeo."[5]

In November 2016 White created an art installation in Chattanooga called Wayne-O-Rama that includes huge cardboard heads of figures from Chattanooga's history, including Dragging Canoe and Adolph Ochs, and a large model of Lookout Mountain featuring details about the mountain including the roadside attractions Rock City, Ruby Falls and the Incline.[6] It was partially funded by the Shaking Ray Levis Society, Benwood Foundation, the Lyndhurst Foundation and See Rock City Inc.

In January 2020, White announced his fourth solo art show at the Joshua Liner Gallery in New York City,[7] and in April 2020, White released a series of eighteen never before seen drawings that he had completed between the years of 2012 and 2020. This release was done in conjunction with the debut of a series of short puppet shows that White created for Instagram with each episode containing a short joke or gag produced by White.[8][9]

White made the cover art, Curdled American Dream, for the X album Alphabetland due to vocalist Exene Cervenka and bassist John Doe both being fans of his work. [10]

White created the cover art and 30 original chapter illustrations for the book Cocaine & Rhinestones: A History of George Jones & Tammy Wynette by Tyler Mahan Coe, published by Simon & Schuster in September 2024. (The book is an adaptation of the second season of the podcast of the same name.)[11] The collaboration on a book is fitting, as several years earlier White and Coe discussed their mutual love of books and country music during a conversation published by Bitter Southerner magazine.[12]

Wayne White beer

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Chattanooga Brewing Company introduced their "Wayne White Ale" beer in 2018.[13]

Personal life

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White and Mimi Pond in 2012

White is married to cartoonist and writer Mimi Pond. They have two children, Woodrow "Woody" White and Lulu White, who are also artists themselves.[14][15]

Works and publications

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  • White, Wayne (2009). Oldham, Todd; Rakowski, Kelly; Cassity, Matt (eds.). Wayne White: Maybe Now I'll Get the Respect I so Richly Deserve. Los Angeles, CA: Ammo Books. ISBN 978-1-934-42911-2. OCLC 213855083.
  • White, Wayne (2010). Wayne White: Big Lectric Fan to Keep Me Cool While I Sleep (Exhibition catalog). Houston, TX: Rice University Art Gallery. ISBN 978-1-932-28137-8. OCLC 949778517. – September 10 – December 13, 2009
  • Pagel, David; White, Wayne (2013). Halo Amok: A Puppet Installation by Wayne White (Exhibition catalog). Oklahoma City, OK: Oklahoma City Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-911-91917-2. OCLC 866857644. – Issued in connection with an exhibition held June 6 – October 6, 2013, Oklahoma City Museum of Art

References

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  1. ^ "Photo gallery: The big buildup for Glass Street Live". timesfreepress.com. September 21, 2016.
  2. ^ Crowder, Chuck, Columnist (October 11, 2012). "Beauty Is Embarrassing: The Weird, Wild, Wonderful World of Wayne White". The Pulse » Chattanooga's Weekly Alternative.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Cast and Crew bios". Archived from the original on August 4, 2009.
  4. ^ Davenport, Bill (September 2009). "Wayne White at Rice Gallery".
  5. ^ "HALO AMOK". Oklahoma City Museum of Art. May 2015.
  6. ^ "City Beat: Wayne-O-Rama, an explosion of creativity, taking shape [video]". timesfreepress.com. November 3, 2016.
  7. ^ "Wayne White at Joshua Liner Gallery". Arts & Culture. Juxtapoz Magazine. January 6, 2020.
  8. ^ Joshua Liner (April 13, 2020). "Wayne White Works On Paper". Artsy.
  9. ^ "The Puppet Show Series Debut". Wayne White. Instagram. April 12, 2020. Archived from the original on December 25, 2021.
  10. ^ Roberts, Randall (April 23, 2020). "How L. A. Artist Wayne White Captured the 'Curdled American Dream' for the Cover of X's Alphabetland". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 23, 2020.
  11. ^ COCAINE AND RHINESTONES | Kirkus Reviews.
  12. ^ "Art & Magic: A Conversation Between Wayne White & Tyler Mahan Coe". THE BITTER SOUTHERNER. Retrieved September 26, 2024.
  13. ^ Team, The Untappd. "Untappd". Untappd.
  14. ^ Pagel, David (February 19, 2011). "Wayne White tells his life story one slide at a time". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 20, 2013.
  15. ^ White, Lulu (June 29, 2021). "Wayne's Kids: Making Art with Lulu & Woodrow". The Bitter Southerner. Retrieved January 29, 2022.

Further reading

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