
Works
1999 – Current
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La Somme de
L'Oxygéne Dans une
Cabine Téléphonique
2008
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Just Taking the
Building To Its Logical
Conclusion
2008
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The Adventures of
Darius and Downey
as Told To Ed Zipco
2008
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House of Cards III
2007
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Our Sculpture
Project Münster
2007
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Animals That Crossed
2007 – Current
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It's The Thought
That Counts
2007
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Taking a Block for a
Walk Around the Block
2007
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Kilroy Receding
My Hairline
2007
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Dying on the Shitter Is
the New Black
2007
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Jeff Koons Meets
Brad Downey
2006
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Negative Space Saves
the Day
2006
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Middle East, Future Site
for Public Sculpture
2006
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Street Eats, Von
Brooklyn Nach Berlin
2005
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Unsere Arbeit Macht
Uns Frei
2005
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The Harder They Come,
the Harder They Fall
2005
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Just Another Brick
in the Wall
2005
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Dont Worry About That
Shit Babe
2005
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Endless Column
in Context
2005
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American Paranoia,
New Sub-Vehicle
Technology
2004
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Darius and Downey
in Actual Size Typo
2003
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A Lady Dreams
of Meeting a Pole
2003
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Holler Back &
I Hear You Bro
2003
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Honk-If You Love Graffiti
2003
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Mars Formation, Future
Site for Public Art
2003
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This Is Where Royal
Vandalism Happened
2003
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Self Portrait at Nineteen
1999


Unsere Arbeit Macht Uns Frei, 2005
Kunstraum Bethanien, Berlin, Germany
Paint on wall, vandalism
In collaboration with Darius Jones
During World War II, “The slogan, "Arbeit macht frei," (Work Makes Free) was placed at the entrances to a number of concentration camps; not as a mockery, not even literally as a false promise that those who worked to exhaustion would eventually be released but rather as a kind of mystical declaration that self-sacrifice in the form of endless labor does in itself bring a kind of spiritual freedom. Our version, which was placed above the exit of our exhibition space, reads, “Unsere Arbeit Macht Uns Frei” (Our Work Makes Us Free). We intended to take the sentence hostage and use it literally in relation to the construction worker costumes we would wear in order to install unsanctioned sculptures in the city. Also, we knew this would provoke immediate criticism and spontaneous debate. I was happy to see the work vandalized by a member of the public a month after Darius Jones and I had returned to New York. |