When I start feeling resistance creating something that I am passionate about, I fear it not being created, more than I fear not creating it. I'd rather show up with 1,000 paintings to a sea of hatred and resistance then coming with no paintings and still be hated. Because, people don't hate you for what you make, they hate you for what you are.
Wasalu Muhammad Jaco
List of paintings by American rapper, record producer, and entrepreneur Wasalu Jaco. He sells them through his company and website, Wolf Studio. His signature is the momento mori skull, which is seen in "Uomo Mangiato Tigre (Man Eating Tiger)" and "War Bonnet #4," used as album artwork for Tetsuo & Youth and Drill Music in Zion, respectively.
For his works in the Beta art exhibition, they were created from 2013-2016 in Jaco's home studio in California. In 2020, he remarked of his 2015 art exhibition at Chicago's Soho House: "It was mostly skulls from various approaches. A lot of the early work was on exhibit. This one here "War Bonnet [#3]" was part of the show and is to me the most intense of the early work. I've painted a couple variations since then. One of my favorites."[1]
Background[]
Originally when Jaco first got into painting, he didn't want to seek it out as a passion due to his beginner skillset. While he held abstract ideas for artwork, he was hesitant to place it on a blank canvas. When he asked his friend in Los Angeles to paint pieces for him, she refused, believing Fiasco could do it, and taught him. From that point on, he spent years learning all he could about painting and the theory behind it and started to do it himself. He found, like music, that it could have "layers of meaning."[2]
He told Billboard in 2015, "I paint a lot—probably too much. I paint more than I write raps. It's the same creative thing for me. I started painting two years ago, and I gave myself 10 years to really get good. I'll sit and paint for 11 hours and get lost in it, the technique of it, trying to execute it clean, colors and palettes, etc. Van Gogh said he wasn't happy unless he was painting, and I'm starting to realize that's becoming true for me. If I'm not in a creative mode and I'm dealing with the outside world, I'm not really happy."[3]
He revealed on Twitter that his song, "Cripple," is "based off a painting."[4]
Gallery[]
"The inspiration came directly from a particular Warhol of Marilyn Monroe at the MOMA. The meaning behind the work, for me, is about our roles in society; how those roles and identities can be reversed and re-decided and the consequences that come along with that process. Chelsea's "double agency" as covert intelligence officer and spy, as well as the overt duality of "man becoming woman", is something that I felt needed to be captured and re-contextualised. She encapsulates the antiheroes in society - sitting up in the heights of mythology, simultaneously demonised and forgiven."
- December 1, 2015
References[]
- ↑ "Lupe Fiasco (@lupefiasco)". Instagram. October 11, 2020.
- ↑ "Conversation with Lupe Fiasco". YouTube. April 23, 2020.
- ↑ Golianopoulos, Thomas (January 15, 2015). "Lupe Fiasco Talks New Album, Defending Iggy Azalea & Quitting Twitter: 'I Don't Want to Be Relevant'". Billboard.
- ↑ "Lupe Fiasco (@LupeFiasco)". Twitter. September 25, 2018.
External links[]
- @wasalujacoworks on Instagram
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