Justin Storms
Justin Storms | |
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Born |
Justin Harvey Storms 1981 Corpus Christi, Texas, United States |
Website | www.justinstorms.com |
Justin Storms (born 1981 in Corpus Christi, Texas) is an American artist and musician.
Art
Storms' work primarily revolves around a post-apocalyptic whaling Dystopia which he refers to as a "Whaletopia." Stylistically his work is airy and serene with gritty themes dealing with: overpopulation, global warming, extinction, war, death, whaling, mysticism, sex, and maritime history. His work has been compared to Hieronymus Bosch and Géricault.
Justin Storms has exhibited in museums, art fairs, and galleries worldwide. A few being The Drawing Center,[1] Preview Berlin,[2] Arthouse at the Jones Center for The New American Talent 23 exhibition in Austin, Walters Art Museum, Loop Gallery in Berlin,[3] Stolenspace Gallery in London,[4] and Parker's Box in Brooklyn.[5]
In 2008 Justin Storms graduated from Maryland Institute College of Art and attended the Triangle Artist Workshop in Brooklyn, NY.[6] In 2008 he was invited to attend the University of Berlin's "Karl Hofer Gesellschaft,"[7] where he exhibited work for the emerging art fair: "Preview Berlin" which was held at the historic Berlin Tempelhof Airport. In 2009, he was awarded Switzerland's "AKKU" residency,[8] located outside of Zurich from 2009-2010. He was commissioned to press 50 copies of the "Whaletopian Coloring Book" by AKKU. In 2010 he was invited to attend the Triangle International Residency in Brooklyn, NY.
Music
Richard Guerrero of the Corpus Christi Caller Times said, "while classic influences such as Roy Orbison and the Everly Brothers as well as Nick Cave and Glenn Danzig are obvious, Justin's morose wail is a fresh one in an age of cut-and-paste digitized rock."
In 2011 Wailin Storms performed at the Mid-Atlantic College Radio Conference, also known as the Macrock festival, in Harrisonburg, VA.
Press
Storms' work has appeared in The New Yorker,[9] Cabinet Magazine,[10] Baltimore City Paper,[11] Glasstire,[12] Art Fag City,[13] Locus Art Magazine,[14] and Zurich's: Tages Anzeiger Oberland.[15]