Ryder Ripps

Ryder Ripps
Born (1986-07-07) July 7, 1986[1]
New York City, New York, United States
Education Eugene Lang/New School, New York City, New York[1] (Bachelor of Arts)
Known for ECD at OKFocus
Notable work Internet Archeology
Dump.fm
V-Files
Style Conceptual art
Digital art
Website ryder-ripps.com

Ryder Ripps (born July 7, 1986)[1] is a conceptual artist[2] living in New York City. He is the creative director of OKFocus,[3] a digital marketing and design agency. Adrian Chen of the New York Times called Mr. Ripps "... the consummate Internet cool kid, as fluent in HTML and JavaScript as in the language of conceptual art..."[2] In 2013, Ripps created the branding for Soylent, an open source meal replacement drink.[4] He is also a music producer with recent credits on Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz.[5] Ripps received a BA from The New School. He is an alumnus of City As School, class of 2004.[6]

Work

Ripp's work has been included in many group shows, including MoMA PS1, New York, Eyebeam, New York, Carroll/Fletcher, London, and the Royal College of Art, London. He has lectured at Rhizome, ForYourArt and Sotheby's.

Ripps is the creator of several websites, including Internet Archeology,[7] Dump.fm,[8] and V-Files.[9]

Ripps' first solo exhibition in January 2015 at Postmasters Gallery in New York City, titled "HO".[10] featured large-scale oil paintings, portraits derived from the Instagram account of model Adrianne Ho.[11] "Rips transformed self-portraits she posted online into expressive, highly distorted pictures. Abstract passages reference the heroic gestures of the Action Painters and are generated through fingers moving across the decidedly unheroic touchscreen - the new site of aggression and anxiety in the age of the "virtual male gaze", where the archetypal macho painter has been emasculated. Through constant self-awareness and mediation... Self becomes malleable, brands now arbitrate beauty: pop culture personas become brands, their authenticity is manipulated by multiple filters and amplified by mass circulation. Ryder Ripps' portraits become a dissection of and a subjugated homage to, his empowered subject as he updates the conversation about the place of painting in contemporary culture.[10]

Ryder Ripps's solo exhibition at Red Bull Studios[12] in February 2015 was a large scale installation in which he materialized the Internet. He "exaggerates the relationship between the content consumer, illuminating the physical solitude of virtual relationships".[12] In this dual level exhibition, viewers become voyeurs surveilling the performative Internet experience. On the lower floor of the space, users can be seen working on the internet. Their activity is visible on monitors upstairs, inside a shipping crate where the performance enacts the corporal aspects of a network. i-D Magazine ran an interview with the artist about the project: https://i-d.vice.com/en_gb/article/how-ryder-ripps-is-making-the-internet

In 2016, New media artist Matt Starr organized a Bernie Sanders-themed art exhibition "Weekend with Bernie" for Wayfarers Gallery in Bushwick, Brooklyn, New York. The exhibition featured Ripps's installation art "Faces of Bernie Sanders Dank Meme Stash" which included Skype video chats with members of the Facebook group Bernie Sanders' Dank Meme Stash. The exhibition raised over $10,000 dollars in donations to the Sanders presidential campaign.[13][14][15]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Ripps bio" (PDF). Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  2. 1 2 Chen, Adrian (July 8, 2014). "Ryder Ripps: An Artist of the Internet". New York Times. p. E6. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  3. "Ryder Ripps". The work of Ryder Ripps.... or whatever.
  4. http://www.thedieline.com/blog/2015/11/17/soylent. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. "Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz Credits".
  6. "Ryder Ripps: "Alone Together", Solo Exhibition at Red Bull Studios, New York (VIDEO)". Huffington Post. June 15, 2015. p. E6. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  7. "Internet Archaeology: Behold the Most Hilarious Abandoned Websites". WIRED.
  8. "Rhizome - Introducing: dump.fm". rhizome.org.
  9. "Ryder Ripps: An Artist of the Internet". The New York Times.
  10. 1 2 "RYDER RIPPS". postmastersart.com.
  11. Freeman, Nate. "The Trial of Ryder Ripps: An Embattled Artist on Haters, Angry Muses, and Threats". Observer.
  12. 1 2 "Ryder Ripps - Alone together".
  13. Ihaza, Jeff (24 February 2016). "How Artists Have Helped Sustain Bernie Sanders' Run To The White House". The Fader. The FADER Media group. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  14. Armstrong, Annie (18 February 2016). "Young Artists Rally to Raise $10K for Bernie Sanders". The Creators Project. Vice Media, Inc. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  15. "Inside "Weekend With Bernie", A Bernie Sanders-Themed Art Exhibition In Brooklyn". Paper. Paper Communications. 15 February 2016. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
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