Saturday, March 16, 2013

Fauxreel


photography, mural, wheat paste, wheatpasting

Street Artist Biography

Wheat Paste 

Street artist Fauxreel has earned his reputation by creating beautiful works of art from photographs. His real name is Dan Bergeron. Fauxreel studied Film and Sonic Design at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. After graduating, he began his career as a freelance writer for a few Toronto magazines and sought photography as another opportunity.



After a couple years, he began working as an assistant video editor for an advertising agency. During this period of time, he continued to photograph simply as a hobby. This experience also opened his perspective and began to include a variety type of design and illustration.

While working for the ad agency, Fauxreel had access to a cold press machine which was able to apply adhesion to paper mediums. Soon he began to combine his photographs into stickers and realized its potential. His desire was to be able to display and express his work to as many people as possible. At this point, street art seemed like a perfect method to deliver his message, not only was he able to attract attention, but he also had the opportunity to adjust to his surroundings and occupied space. The transition was made from regular photographic prints to using 20 lb paper.

Although there are many street artists and photographers, who have begun to work on large-scale photographic street art, few have properly adjusted their photographic presentations into the street art realm successfully. In essence, this allows photographers to obtain a different group of fans and their work is exposed on a different level.
wheat paste, art, street art, paste up

Fauxreel is attracted to the power and potential of a camera. With endless possibilities, he notes street artist JR’s work as successfully demonstrating a prime example of the photographic implementation with urban art. Not only is his work greatly admired, but it also helps to represent those in society who unrepresented by the media. H also admires other artists, like Judith Supine, who use photography in their work but not personal photographs; however, he considers their work different because they obtain their pictures from other sources.


Fauxreel, Brick by Brick from unurth on Vimeo.

Sources:

http://fauxreel.ca/

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