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Deflategate, 2nd Quarter Collage

Robert Dewitt Adams

United States

Collage, cardboard on Cardboard

Size: 11 W x 10 H x 2 D in

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About The Artwork

My Football Collage series expands from my work looking at the aesthetics of war, into the competitive realm of sports. The connection between the two arenas goes back at least to the ancient Greeks, who founded the Olympic games as a non-deadly way to channel rivalries. The line between war and sport can often become blurred, as seen when General Norman Schwarzkopf talked of the “Hail Mary Pass” that finished Saddam’s army, or Nike’s development of “Procombat” football uniforms. Uniform colors are featured in this series, exploring the fanatical feelings aroused in fans who claim to, for example, “bleed yellow and green” (my alma mater, the UO Ducks). The pieces are 11” x 10”, rectangular like the gridiron and symbolizing the eleven players per American football team and ten yards per down. The pieces are grouped in sets of four, symbolically reflecting the stats of a specific game after each quarter: score, interceptions, injuries, time-outs, sacks, etc. The pieces use recycled consumer packaging as a nod to the high-stakes industry of commercials and endorsements surrounding sports. Inspiration came in part from a 2007 visit to UO by art collector Richard Weisman. The Schnitzer Museum exhibited a series of sports figure silk-screen portraits that Weisman commissioned from Andy Warhol. Weisman said he came up with the idea in part to help bridge the gap of understanding and interest between sports and art fans. Interestingly, they were stolen from Weisman’s LA home in 2009 and are still missing – is there a conspiracy to keep sports and art fans from uniting? I myself have not been a big sports fan, but working on the series has opened my mind to it. I plan to try the technique with other sports as well, but football in particular lends itself to a map-like depiction of capturing territory from the opposing side.

Details & Dimensions

Collage:cardboard on Cardboard

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:11 W x 10 H x 2 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

robatoms@gmail.com Robert Dewitt Adams is originally from the Washington, DC area, and lived in the Pacific Northwest 1996 - 2011. Currently in Jacksonville, he is adjunct faculty at the University of North Florida. He earned his MFA in 2007 from the University of Oregon. His work has been included in exhibitions around the U.S. and internationally, including shows at the Seattle Art Museum Rental/Sales Gallery; the Jacobs Gallery and DIVA in Eugene; the Viridian Artists Gallery in Manhattan; the Saville Gallery in Cumberland, Maryland; the Roseville Arts Center in Roseville, CA; and Galleria Vasari in Citta di Castello, Italy. Guest jurors selecting his work have come from institutions such as the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Carnegie Museum of Art, as well as from galleries including Elizabeth Leach in Portland, Howard House in Seattle, and Charles Cowles in New York. Images of Robert's work have appeared in the Eugene Weekly, Seattle Weekly, Art Access, and Artweek magazine. His cartoons and illustrations have won awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. In addition to teaching at Lane Community College, Robert also served as Art Director for the Community Center for Performing Arts (Wow Hall) in Eugene. He collaborated on set design with Eugene's Ballet Fantastique for its Hult Center performance Visions d'Amour. ARTIST STATEMENT I began making photocopy collage art in high school, inspired by the do-it-yourself "˜zine culture. While taking my parents' advice and majoring in science at American University in Washington, D.C., I also took art classes. Growing up near Washington in a military family was a good place to learn cynicism and an interest in relationships of power. An alternate and more positive perspective on the world was provided by the Smithsonian's art museums, in particular its collections of pop art and the Washington Colorist school. The paradox of humanity's potential for creativity, measured against its penchant for ignorance and cruelty, continues to intrigue me. Folk artists inspired me to paint, in their ability to make beautiful creations out of the overlooked and the everyday. I began using pop imagery after a conservation corps job fishing colorful trash from streams.

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