Ryan Travis Christian: WELL, HERE'S TO FEELING GOOD ALL OF THE TIME
Past exhibition
Overview
Ryan Travis Christian (California, 1983) is a contemporary artist known for his densely detailed graphite drawings that combine witty observation with a vintage cartoon aesthetic. Born in Oakland, California, and currently based in the Chicago suburbs, Christian studied at Northern Illinois University. His works, which include amorphous characters, dizzying patterns and an ironic perspective on contemporary life, reflect a unique fusion of 1920s and 1930s black and white animation and 1980s pop culture. The artist is distinguished by his refusal to draw human figures realistically, preferring contoured, bug-eyed versions.
Ryan Travis Christian's current exhibition is a visual journey through mundane activities reinterpreted as zany graphic fantasies. Inspired by the black and white cartoons of the silent animation era, as well as American suburban culture, Christian presents scenes that are both nostalgic and surreal. Recurring elements in his narratives include brick houses, condoms and animals, all shrouded in an atmosphere of satire and danger.
The exhibition addresses contemporary issues such as immigration, depression and the American dream, exploring the paradoxical relationship between children's cartoons and ominous messages. In his recent works, Christian magnifies his obsessive micro-transgressions, creating a large-scale public satire that challenges worn-out American mythologies. Anthropomorphic characters, drawn from early 20th century animation, are set in seedy, soft-focus environments, reflecting a tension between the childlike and the unsettling.
Christian has developed a darkly humorous style that is evident in his solo and collaborative exhibitions in cities such as New York, Los Angeles, London, Paris and Berlin. In addition to his gallery works, he has created murals in public spaces and runs a product marketplace through his website. With his focus on innocent-looking cartoons, but with profound and often ominous messages, Christian invites the viewer to reconsider traditional notions of pop culture and reflect on the tensions inherent in contemporary life.
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