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Heroic effort

We are here! We are here!
By SARA FAITH ALTERMAN  |  August 15, 2007

070817_superheros_main

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s . . . some dude in tights wielding a paintbrush?

Irritated by the widespread assumption that “serious” art emerges only from culturally significant cities such as New York or London, Boston–based sculptor Brian Burkhardt and photographer Tanit Sakakini decided to launch an ad campaign designed to show the world what the Boston art scene is made of.

Apparently, it’s made of sparkly tights and body paint.

On Saturday, August 11, approximately 20 local artists gathered at a warehouse space on Dry Dock Avenue to be transformed into superhero supermodels and pose for a group photo that will serve as a signature piece for the campaign.

“As artists, we’re always asked when we’re moving to New York,” says Burkhardt, “but there is more than one Gotham City! There are superheroes everywhere.”

Boston is generally regarded as a stepping stone within the local arts and performance communities. Actors, comedians, musicians, studio artists, and writers hone their skills here, then take off for the soulless talent vacuums of bigger, faster cities. Burkhardt and Sakakini are adamant about keeping the art community in Boston energized so that people don’t want to pack up their palettes and leave once they’ve experienced a modicum of success.

While a meeting of Batman, Catwoman, the Flash, Zorro, the Mighty Thor, She-Hulk, and an awesomely iridescent roller-disco superheroine named the Dazzler may make for one hell of a Fight Club, the artists are hoping their photo campaign will be more than just a novelty and pretty pictures.

“We don’t want to be labeled as ‘Boston artists,’ but as international artists who happen to reside here,” says Burkhardt, nestled in a wheelchair as Professor X. “We choose to stay here in Boston.”

Then, on cue, the heroes pulled on their masks, stubbed out their cigarettes, and set off on their mission to conquer for the art world, one city at a time.

Related: Must warn others, Les fleurs du shopping mall, Geo-politics, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Brian Burkhardt, Charles Xavier
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Comments
Heroic effort
BREAKING EDITORIAL: WE DON'T NEED ANOTHER EGO. Attention Bourgeois-Bohemian Heroes and Regular Working Class Slobs! The Boston Superheroes Project is an unthoughtful marketing ploy disguised as an art project! In putting together this photo session for Boston (Yuppie Furniture) Magazine, no thought was put into comics, comics history and comics artists nor to the idea of the Superhero (or to the lesser extent: the boring Hero). You can hardly blame the people involved... to a point. I mean, who doesn't want to dress your friends in costumes and have a great time? (In fact, I dress up my friends as blind nudists all the time!) Its what the costumes represent, and what you claim your group stands for once you put them on a press release and send it off to an all too unquestioning local media. There's no problem with exclusivity when done intelligently (after all, the Whitney Museum is a Museum of only American art, fuh real!!!). However, this group is not a working art group or collective by any definition and, as one (real) professor (of ART!!!) pointed out, is curated solely by a grown man who has no qualms about dressing like a handicapped person. SO... Where are the questions about this and other representation? Why the flaring up of tempers over the dialogue others hope to inspire? This has very little to do with the real Boston art scene, or some contrived fantasy rivalry with New York, so what is this about? Artists: where are your senses of dignity, and (more importantly) of humor? Really, lighten up... this is Boston, not Williamsburg! In short, regarding the Boston art scene thing: Less action hero! More real action! I'd love to write more, but we are a nation at war (just a reminder... easy to forget, I KNOW, FUH REAL!!!), and I've got to continue robbing you and your future generations of your future. Best Regards, Condi Rice Undersecretary of the Legion of Doom
By Hornblower on 10/23/2007 at 12:51:03

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