Mighty fine to see your boots step into my story and I reckon your mug fits well in that peep hole! This here interactive art installation is gettinâ them high-falutinâ Marfa folks all stirred up. This poap marks your irl encounter with a scene from âThe Outlaw Expressâ and I betcha your faces got all them art wranglers kickinâ up a fuss. So snap a group pic and watch out for dimwits thieving everything but the actual loot. Greetings from Marfa!
Well howdy, pardner! Right glad to cross paths with ya. Ainât often a gal meets folk wanderinâ this lonesome desert trail, and Iâd wager youâve gotta sharp eye for spottinâ me in this dusty crowd. Shakinâ your handâs got me smiling happier than a hog in a mud wallow and Iâm tickled pink as a sunrise to meet ya! www.rebeccarosenft.com
What an absolute delight to meet you amidst the sacred carnival that is Art Basel Miami Beach! The sheer confluence of brilliant art and overpriced rosé is gloriously overwhelming, like a thousand tortured artist souls finally freed to express themselves in pixels, acrylic, and neon. Meeting you here, amidst this chaotic symphony of self-expression, stalled causeways, and aching feet, feels downright kismet. We shall toast to art, life, and the endurance of bananas duct-taped to a wall for the price of a small yacht. Baseltov!
Redbeardâs Double Secret Probation Party//ALLSHIPS
An evening with esteemed companions dear, With food and music, conversation near. Weâve crafted this event to suit your taste, A night where magic, mystery is placed. Join us at ALLSHIPS Salon, our delight, For a wondrous, curated, special night.
This POAP commemorates Grant Yunâs first physical solo exhibition Growing Up in Seoul, South Korea. Hosted by Avant Arte, the exhibition is open to the public from 22-30 March 2024 at Soft Corner Gallery in Gangnam-gu, Seoul. âGrowing up is a journey you take on your own.â Since 2019, Grant Yun has lived between his permanent home in Wisconsin and New England. When the Covid pandemic hit he found himself isolating in Connecticut. Like the rest of the world, he was âforced to take in that loneliness.â A feeling of distance saturates this series of works on paper. Sometimes that is the cultural distance between an immigrant parent and their child â while the child craves American snacks like a PB&J, the parent relishes in the delayed gratification of kimchee (Mom Made Dinner!). Although he grew up in California, the weight of history Yun felt in New England caused him to reflect on his childhood as a first-generation Korean-American. This is encapsulated in the tender depiction of a father, Dad. The figure disappearing into the shadow of a house is a sombre reminder of generational distance, captured in an everyday scene remembered from childhood. Growing Up is Yunâs first exhibition in Korea, and feels like a full circle moment for him. It presents his quintessentially American Neo-Precisionism in South Korea, connecting two of the cultures that raised him.




