Wednesday, May 05, 2010

ARTICLE ON TULLMAN COLLECTION AND TRIBECA FLASHPOINT MEDIA ARTS ACADEMY IN "CHICAGO ART MACHINE" BY CLAIRE LYNCH

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Howard Tullman and Flashpoint Academy


Claire Lynch


Howard Tullman at Flashpoint Academy. Photo courtesy of Nick Novelli.

In today’s world, many successful people are a brand. In Chicago and the world of art collectors as a whole, Howard Tullman (tullman.blogspot.com) is a major one. His role as a tastemaker is unique, for his choice in art is far from classic. In fact, it’s jaw dropping.


Chicago Art Collector had the opportunity to view Tullman’s art displayed at his latest endeavor: Flashpoint Academy (www.tribecaflashpoint.com), a school is dedicated to digital art (from filmmaking to game design). The space is bursting with works specifically selected for the students.


Tullman explained that he wants to show them something inspiring and something they can relate to.


While giving a tour and pointing out the works, Howard enthusiastically informed me of artists’ backgrounds and material used.


"Oops… I Did It Again" by Cameron Gray

Oops… I Did It Again, is a painting of Britney Spears, bald and with a halo. In this particular work, a series of small, individually painted blocks of wood were combined and an image of Spears was painted over them. These blocks weren’t painted by the artist. Instead, porn images selected by the artist were sent to other artist acquaintances and they were instructed to paint their versions of the images on the blocks and sent them back. Gray then created the eerie portrait of Britney.


The collection at Flashpoint is shocking and ever-evolving. Tullman changes the display himself, typically every two weeks.


Viewing it, and getting a glimpse of Tullman’s taste was an exciting precursor to viewing his personal collection, housed in an inconspicuous West Loop building.


If it burned down, Tullman claims he would escape carrying Fly Dog, a large sculpture of a nude, deranged man, crouching on top of a ladder. The loft is filled to the brim with eccentric art.


Standing in one of his rooms, a viewer will face combative stares, a thousand naked women, a wall of Pez dispensers, and a life-size sculpture of a pig wearing an NYPD uniform.




True collectors make a statement; the collection reflects the man. Only a living, breathing machine could do what Howard Tullman has done in his career(www.tullman.com). To compare his life, in which he’s lived by his own rules, to an art collection far from the establishment’s aesthetic, you see that this collection does what collectors are always asked to do – think for themselves.

When a collector does that, their collection can be read as a cumulative of their private and public persona - a mix of psychoanalysis, self-portrait, and branding statement. What is seen within an honest and straightforward personal collection/reflection is always exciting. Tullman’s collection and life choices are both wide-reaching, energetic, and fearless – matching the career and life of man completely at ease in a life of sensory, and information, overload.

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