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2018 Jazz Fest Poster

2018 Jazz Fest Poster

$125.00

Fats by Terrance Osborne

Any attempt to sum up the life and outsized presence of Antoine “Fats” Domino, Jr. in New Orleans is folly. Simply stated, neither would have been the same without the other. Both are eternal joys. The life Fats lived here – red beans simmering. music radiating from humble architecture more human than the towers that define other cities – is palpable in Terrance Osborne’s robust portrait of The Fat Man (title of the first rock and roll record to sell 1 million copies, cowritten with producer Dave Bartholomew) in the kingdom he ruled with grace and notes.
 
No matter the accolades (credit from the likes of Elvis, John & Paul; member of the first class inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame; Lifetime Achievement Grammy; National Medal of Arts recipient 25th on Rolling Stone’s list of the “100 Greatest Artists of All Time”), the global popularity (65 million records sold, 35 Billboard Top 40 hits – 11 of them Top 10) and the means that flowed from his songwriting, often with Bartholomew (Ain’t That A Shame, I Want To Walk You Home, I’m Gonna Be a Wheel Someday, I’m in Love Again, I’m Walkin’, Whole Lotta Lovin’ and many more), he never left the Lower Ninth Ward until forced out by Katrina. His humility and permanence personified the soul of New Orleans. where music, food and family are bedrock values.
 
Few painters command color as intuitively as Terrance Osborne, or apply paint with such knowing detail. Osborne’s instinctive sense of light and shadow is felt as much as seen here. There’s much to be discovered in the bounty of this piece, his fifth Jazz Fest commission (including two stand-out Congo Square commissions). Osborne was the natural choice to portray Fats. He illuminates Fats’ continuing legacy by creating a matched “diptych” to his sold-out 2012 Jazz Fest portrait of Troy ”Trombone Shorty” Andrews. It stands on its own yet forms a brilliant baton-passing allegory paired “around da cornder” from Shorty’s house.
 
Classic oil-based silk-screen pigments p rinted one by one on archival papers over the course of a two month process t ranslate the art ist’s intent with perfect fidelity. The remarqued and canvas editions bear Fats Domino’s estate stamped signature. “Brilliant” doesn’t do the work or his subject justice. Like Fats’ legacy. this Jazz Fest poster is timeless – a defining work and a must-have poster.
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Art

2014 Jazz Fest Poster

2014 Jazz Fest Poster

$195.00

Aural History: Preservation Hall & The Preservation Hall Jazz Band

by Terrance Osborne

In 1963, Allan Jaffe organized the Preservation Hall Jazz Band as a touring group to bring this joyous noise to the world. By 1967, the Band had seduced the beast that nearly devoured New Orleans jazz, triumphantly playing alongside The Grateful Dead, Santana, and Steppenwolf at a Bill Graham concert in San Francisco. A SO-year old band will have some personnel changes over the years but this band probably sets the record at 46 members and counting. And in a city of legacies, none is more poignant than that the tuba chair has been passed to Allan and Sandra’s son, Ben Jaffe, who also mans the upright bass in the Band’s current eight-man lineup.
 
Here, Osborne shows his continuing evolution as an artist, leveraging his vigorous style to reveal his subject’s depth. His shrewd use of a trump l’oei sleight to preserve the buildings’ orthogonal geometry and maintain the Band’s vertical plane is masterful. His allegory of the band emerging from its historic home binds the two and alludes to its going on tour as if a marching band, a heritage it shares but does not embody. From the smallest details, such as including the house cat, to his placing Ben Jaffe, Allan Jaffe’s son who ascended to his father’s tuba position, overseeing the band’s arc – a curve that pulls the viewer deep into the Hall – Osborne delivers history with knowing grace.

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2014 Congo Square Poster

2014 Congo Square Poster

$90.00

Master Classic: A 4-Way Portrait of Ernie K-Doe – Emperor of the World

by Richard Thomas

Richard Thomas needs no introduction to collectors of Jazz Fest and Congo Square posters. His portrait of Fats Domino UF89), commemorating the 20th Anniversary of Jazz Fest, launched the portrait series that continues to this day. His 2006 Congo Square poster (CS06) showed him making this early form truly his own. He is an artist, gallerist and teacher. His work is instantly recognizable even as it continues to evolve.
 
His approach to his subject is masterful. K-Doe went through many phases, not all of them pretty. Thomas curated K-Doe’s career highs and matched each one to a style he developed and utilized during his own artistic arc. The upper left 1961 portrait t racks the pop 60’s style Thomas used in his Fats Domino classic. The upper right concert era of the later GO’s is appropriately done in a solarized psychedelia motif. K-Doe’s WWOZ years showcases Thomas· return to the realism he used so effectively in his early political paintings. He imparts his current artistic innovations to his portrait of the emperor in all his glory. This lower right quadrant is a culmination of the styles that led to it realism amplified by expressionism overlaid with exuberantly joyful pop jottings.

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2013 Jazz Fest Poster

2013 Jazz Fest Poster

$100.00

Heart Song: A Portrait of Aaron Neville by James Michalopoulos

In 1960, a teenager named Aaron Neville with the voice of an angel joined brother Art in the family music business. Art had a 1954 hit with the Hawketts’ classic, “Mardi Gras Mambo.” Despite this early success, Aaron was working as a longshoreman when Hawkett George Davis came calling in 1965 with a song he co-wrote, “Tell It Like It Is.” Getting no takers for the recording from any big label, Davis started Par-lo Records and pressed 2,000 copies of it in late 1966. Aaron’s vocalization went on to own #1 on the R & B chart for a month. #2 on Billboard’s Hot 100 for 14 weeks and is #391 on Rolling Stone’s soo Greatest Songs. The docks would have to make do without Aaron who earned more gold in 1989 for “Don’t Know Much,” (#2 on the Pop charts) and 1991 with  Everybody Plays the Fool,” a top-10 Pop hit. Aaron Neville’s modulating vibrato tenor falsetto is the greatest instrument born in New Orleans. And he keeps it finely polished, as evidenced by the just-released “My True Story,” his Blue Note album debut produced by Keith Richards and Don Was.
 
James Michalopoulos’ deeply felt portrait distills Aaron’s twin inspirations: New Orleans and spirituality. The city is fully captured by the artist’s distinguished minimalist architectural elements, a wrought iron fence and gas lampposts. Ethereal doves embody spirits set aflutter by an angelic voice. Trees bow in nature’s embrace, .and of course, a yellow moon tops the harmoniously lighted dusk scene. Michalopoulos has created five definitive contributions to this, the world’s most collected poster series UF98, JF01, JF03, JF06 & JF09J including three of its most valuable. Michalopoulos is a celebrated representational New Orleans artist best known for his spiritually imbued architectural renderings. His vivid pigmentation is fully realized in this silkscreen printing, which applies each color individually to museum standard papers. Michalopoulos exhibits extensively in the art capitals of Europe and the United States. He maintains studios and galleries in Burgundy France and New Orleans.

 

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2013 Congo Square Poster

2013 Congo Square Poster

$100.00

Buckwheat’s Zydeco: A Congo Square Tribute to the Spirit of Southwest

Louisiana by R. Gregory Christie

Before Congo Square hosted the first Jazz Fest, before it became the spiritual center of Jazz Fest’s celebration of Afro-Caribbean influences on American art, it was America’s original musical melting pot. Its core position in the development of Louisiana’s cultural gifts to the world is perhaps nowhere more evident than in the interplay that birthed Zydeco. Modern Zydeco evolved a half-century later, in those same Creole communities on the Louisiana prairies during the 1920’s, drawing from blues, Jazz, R&B and Cajun influences. Lafayette native Stanley Dural, Jr., known since the age of four as “Buckwheat” because his braided hair was reminiscent of the Our Gang movies character. was more a fan of R&B than of Zydeco. As a keyboard prodigy he backed major roadhouse acts including Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown (CS0S). On his climb to the top, the New York Times pronounced him the leader of one of the best bands in America,” and USA Today called him a “Zydeco trailblaze r.” Zydeco’s most popular ambassador has shared his propulsive roots music on record and on stage with Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Robert Plant. U2, Willie Nelson, Paul Simon and the Boston Pops among many others. He played the closing ceremony of the 1996 Olympics and for both of President Clinton’s inaugurals.

Artist R. Gregory Christie traces his own Southwest Louisiana Creole roots to his mother’s family in New Roads where still returns to see his aunts, uncles and cousins. For over two decades, he’s been pushing brilliant hues into warmly expressive frontiers. His overt influences were Romare Bearden, Picasso and Jacob Lawrence, but h is folk-inspired synthesis makes his shrewdly structured, intellectually fresh pieces accessible and compelling.

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2010 Jazz Fest Poster

2010 Jazz Fest Poster

$100.00

Performance Art: The Chief of New Orleans

A Portrait of Louis Prima by Anthony Benedetto (Tony Bennett)

2010 marked the centennial year of Louis Prima’s birth, a New Orleans-born legend whose contributions to the American music scene are measured by the decade. In the 1930s, with his New Orleans Gang, he took his trumpet and vocal style to New York and Los Angeles where he helped define an era, forming a 22-piece orchestra that regularly topped the Big Band Era charts of the ’40s. Big Bands having faded by the ’50s, Prima moved to Las Vegas, where he fashioned the Witnesses with New Orleans’s great tenor saxophonist Sam Butera and defined yet another music scene. That band’s shuffle beat combined with its New Orleans jazz roots laid the foundation for early Rock & Roll. Even after his passing in 1975, Louis Prima still spun gold (The Louis Prima Capital Collectors Series compilation CD went gold in 2008) and topped the charts (His Live From Las Vegas hit the Billboard Top Jazz Album chart in 2005.). If you don’t know Prima, you No Capicia. 

The world knows Tony Bennett as a peerless interpreter of the American songbook. Yet as a child growing up in Queens, New York, he wanted to be a painter. No one could better capture Prima’s five-decades in music than a man firmly rooted in the same traditions and experiences. Bennett paints under his family name of Benedetto and lives out his visual passions through this alter ego: As  Tony Bennett tours the world, Anthony Benedetto paints and sketches a rarified daily scene, from intimate musical gatherings  to international cityscapes. We’re honored to present his eloquent portrait of his dear friend and colleague, the expressive Louis Prima. For more information on Tony Bennett’s artwork please visit his website.

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2011 Congo Square Poster

2011 Congo Square Poster

$100.00

Everything Old is Renewed Again™: Fats Houston A Portrait in Dignity

by Kenneth Scott, Jr.

The immortal Matthew “Fats” Houston, the most iconic grand marshal ever to strut a New Orleans street graced the 1976 Jazz Fest poster and while this marvelous retake celebrates the 35th anniversary of that glorious slice of time and place, it also lovingly memorializes the great man’s passing. Jazz’s evanescence defied personification until Fats Houston fronted the Eureka, Olympia and Young Tuxedo Brass Bands. crafting the definitive grand marshal persona out of found objects turned into sashes and a strutting gait that defied duplication as it defined dignity.
 
Kenneth Scott Jr. came into the world just as Fats was exiting. Yet despite never having second-lined with the man himself. Scott captures the majesty of his subject in an enduring work. Scott grew up in New Orleans’ 9th ward and leveraged his precocious art talents to move beyond its constraints. Like Terrance Osborne (CS07, CS10) before him, Scott benefited from the tutelage of New Orleans’ great art educator, Richard Thomas 0F89, CS06). Discovering Scott’s neo-Pop artwork displayed at Jazz Fest’s Congo Square Marketplace reawakened the poster publisher’s long-held desire to return to classic poster imaging and do a “remix” of a cherished subject. The work Scott produced is a reflect ion of Fats’ transcendent grace and a tribute to the artist’s intuitive talent.