A Dedication To My Friend,Wim ~ Kris Kuksi Art

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  • + ak85ka ak85ka  ڿڰۣڿڰۣ☸ڿڰۣڿڰۣ 2 weeks ago
    Wow Trinity!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! How very impressive pics my dear!!!!!!!!!!!! That is really a fantastic presentation!!!!!!!!!! Excellent work!!!!!!!!!!! Thanks for sharing...
  • + 78dOee Kausalya Janardanan 2 weeks ago
    Amazing Art Work.
  • + kapitan Kapitán József 2 weeks ago
    Beautiful gift from Wim ... and so did we.
  • + xiby George Sciberras. to appreciate the PPS, download it. 3 weeks ago
    Nice dedication Trinity. This is so much Wim’s selection. KK is simply fantastic and highly artistic.
  • + vili48 Vili 48 3 weeks ago
    This is very original show and good music! Thank that share, Trinity! Hugs! Vili
  • + CMP Carmen María Pérez 3 weeks ago
    ¡Congratulations! excelent work. Thanks for sharing. Hugs, Carmen María.
  • + nikkitta Nikkitta M 3 weeks ago
    Wowwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww
    Wowwwwwwwwwww for the music
    Wowwwwwwwwwwwwwww for the artist
    Wowwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww for you to share it!!!
    I ....love slidecast!!!
  • + marcomaestro Marco Belzoni 3 weeks ago
    What a great artist and you made a nice presentation of it.Thanks for sharing Trinity!
  • + nbarnich N. Barnich 3 weeks ago
    Like Ren, I like Slidecasts a lot because it’s easier that way. And often, effects are not needed anyway. An d it’s easy to read manually or the transcript anyway.
    A great, great show about a very original artist, impossible to classify, which makes him so personal and interesting. Great work! NB
  • + hermina Hermina (`*•.¸(`*•.¸ ¸.•*´)¸.•*´) Michal 3 weeks ago
    Wou Wou!!!!!!!!!!!!! amezing my dear

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A Dedication To My Friend,Wim ~ Kris Kuksi Art - Presentation Transcript

  1. “When falls the coliseum, Rome shall fall; and when Rome falls--the world.” ~ Lord Byron
    Born March 2, 1973, in Springfield Missouri and growing up in neighboring Kansas, Kris spent his youth in rural seclusion and isolation along with a blue-collar, working mother, two much-older brothers and an absent father. Open country, sparse trees, and alcoholic stepfather, perhaps paved the way for an individual saturated in imagination and introversion. His fascination with the unusual lent to his macabre art later in life. The grotesque to him, as it seemed, was beautiful. Reaching adulthood his art blossomed and created a breakthrough of personal freedom from the negative environment experienced during his youth. He soon discovered his distaste for the typical American life and pop culture, feeling that he has always belonged to the ‘Old World’. Yet, Kris’ work is about a new wilderness, refined and elevated, visualized as a cultivation emerging from the corrupt and demoralized fall of modern-day society. A place were new beginnings, new wars, new philosophies, and new endings exist.
    Click….
  2. In personal reflection, he feels that in the world today much of mankind is oftentimes frivolous and fragile, being driven primarily by greed and materialism. He hopes that his art exposes the fallacies of Man, unveiling a new level of awareness to the viewer. His work has received several awards and prizes and has been featured in over 100 exhibitions in galleries and museums worldwide including the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery. Kris’ art can also be seen in a number of international art magazines, book covers and theatrical posters. Kris’ art is featured in both public and private collections in the United States, Europe, and Australia that include individuals such as Mark Parker (Nike CEO), Kay Alden (three time Emmy award winning writer for Young and the Restless & Bold and the Beautiful), Fred Durst (musician, and film director), and Chris Weitz (movie director The Golden Compass & American Pie).
  3. Kuksi’s art speaks of a timelessness–potentiality and motion attempting to reach on forever, and yet pessimistically delayed; forced into the stillness of death and eternal sleep. He treats morbidity with a sympathetic touch and symbolizes the paradox of the death of the individual by objective personification of death. There is a fear of this consciousness because it drops in upon us without mercy, and yet there is a need to appeal to it in order to provide a sense of security, however deluded that sense may be. Kuksi’s art warns us that this appeal is irrelevant, and that we should be slow to create a need for it. His themes also teach us that although death may pursue us arbitrarily, we should never neglect to mourn the tremendous loss of individual potential.
  4. Timed…
  5. "Perhaps it is far too objectionable to begin to agree upon what art is or what great art should be. Therefore, it is most certain that for myself, within this occupation, I must be true to my tastes and to expel those pressures to conform to art-trends new or old."
    Kris Kuksi
    Trinity
    November 2009
    http://www.slideshare.net/trinityblu

+ Trinity Blu*** Don't Thank Me for Viewing Shows....but Rather,  Pay It Forward :))*** Trinity Blu*** Don't Thank Me for Viewing Shows....but Rather, Pay It Forward :))*** , 3 weeks ago

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