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This photograph features “Poppin Joze”, a vivid mixed-media work by Brazilian street art legends OSGEMEOS, as exhibited at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. Known for their instantly recognizable yellow-skinned figures, twin brothers Otavio and Gustavo Pandolfo infuse their work with a surreal, dreamlike energy that draws from Brazilian culture, hip-hop, graffiti, and personal memory.

 

In Poppin Joze, we meet a stylized family rendered in OSGEMEOS’s trademark style: elongated limbs, small eyes, patterned clothing, and a flat, matte yellow skin tone that’s intended to represent a “neutral” humanity. The central figure, Joze, sports a bold blue shirt with “POPPIN JOZE” printed across the chest, surrounded by family members who evoke both intimacy and tension. A baby is cradled at the mother’s hip, a girl picks her nose, and a revolver is playfully (yet ominously) pointed into the frame.

 

Though cartoonish at first glance, the work is rich in emotional and socio-political resonance. This is a domestic scene shaped by urban hardship and resilience — equal parts tenderness, chaos, and coded commentary. Household clutter, scribbled wall drawings, and worn clothing all add to the textured realism. The shelf in the background with bottles and cans, the tired flooring, and the stereo speaker tucked under a foot all speak to lived-in space — layered, imperfect, real.

 

Framed in a vibrant green box and photographed against the Hirshhorn’s distinctive lavender wall during a special exhibition, Poppin Joze reflects the museum’s commitment to showcasing cutting-edge global contemporary art. OSGEMEOS, who began their careers as graffiti writers in São Paulo, have since exhibited in major institutions worldwide — and here, their street-inspired visual language translates powerfully to the museum setting.

 

This photo captures the artwork in full color and context — documenting not just the piece itself, but how it breathes within the museum space. It stands at the intersection of street and fine art, personal and political, playful and profound.

Made with 3 used, "canceled" playing cards from a casino deck and a pink ace.

Little bug made from discarded X-mas light, wire, metal beads. I know, he's not quite anatomically correct, but I just love him. He looks inquisitive to me LOL

 

~2" long

Digital Print

Available on www.webersart.com

Watercolor

Available

Digital Print

Available at www.webersart.com

Digital Print

Available at www.webersart.com

Oil on Canvas

Available

Pencil & Watercolor

Available

Watercolor

Available

Made with discarded outdoor X-mas lights and scrap telephone wire.

 

Bodies measure 2" to 3"

3 1/2" to 6" leg spans

 

Inspired by this short video of Lama Zopa Rinpoche liberating spiders - shar.es/a9HUq

Lab Cabinet (Curiosity Cabinet) made with bugs from "creatures" and junk store jars and containers, recycled bookcase, old keys, found metal scraps.

 

30" H x 23 1/2" W x 13"

The desert tortoise is one of 12 reptiles threatened by global warming, according to the Center for Biological Diversity. They were once as numerous as 1,000 torts per square mile in the Mojave Desert. Loss of habitat and raven predation are immediate threats but biologist believe global warming/climate change could add disease, fire, predation & new habitat threats.

 

This is my piece I submitted to the Climate Change in the Desert contest/show. My first time doing this, I am excited and nervous—the other submissions are incredibly wonderful, artistic, beautiful. But I’m very excited to be a part of something so environmentally important, as an artist! A big step for me. Read more...http://goo.gl/ksb5

 

Made with:

Found bike wheel; found auto parts/washers (embedded in hatchlings); found toaster oven knob; scrap wire; quartz crystal, can lids; stone beads; clay; acrylic

 

~12” diameter

ELmore's Landing

Artist gallery 🎨

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