Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Ramblin’ Worker Studio Visit

Equipped only with a vintage sewing machine and a pair of cutting shears, San Francisco based artist Ramblin' Worker creates top notch design in an otherwise mundane medium. Hi Fructose recently visited Ramblin' Worker's studio to catch up, have some beers, and check out his latest body of work. Steve, as he's legally known, got into the more DIY medium after graduating from college in the early aughts. As many a student of the arts has discovered, after graduation Steve found himself broke and more importantly, without the resources an art school so generously provides. Lacking the space for a darkroom or the money for oil paints, Steve found a happy compromise in a compact sewing machine and some thread. Since then, Steve has shown at the Max Fish Gallery in New York as well as at Gallery Three in San Francisco. He had a piece in the 2006 Deitch Art Parade and will be returning to New York on April 24th, 2010 for a solo show at Fuse Gallery. Pictorial studio visit here.

Equipped only with a vintage sewing machine and a pair of cutting shears, San Francisco based artist Ramblin’ Worker creates top notch design in an otherwise mundane medium. Hi Fructose recently visited Ramblin’ Worker’s studio to catch up, have some beers, and check out his latest body of work. Steve, as he’s legally known, got into the more DIY medium after graduating from college in the early aughts. As many a student of the arts has discovered, after graduation Steve found himself broke and more importantly, without the resources an art school so generously provides. Lacking the space for a darkroom or the money for oil paints, Steve found a happy compromise in a compact sewing machine and some thread. Since then, Steve has shown at the Max Fish Gallery in New York as well as at Gallery Three in San Francisco. He had a piece in the 2006 Deitch Art Parade and will be returning to New York on April 24th, 2010 for a solo show at Fuse Gallery. Pictorial studio visit below.

Meta
Topics
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
We live in strange times and artists Michael Kerbow and Mike Davis both have something in common: they use surrealism and time travel to address modern and existential issues. Click above to read the Hi-Fructose exclusive interviews with painters Mike Davis and Michael Kerbow about their respective solo showings.
Artist and animation director Joe Vaux paints what he likes. His personal work is teeming with impish demons. His cheerful hellscapes are populated with lost souls, sharp toothed monstrosities, and swarms of wrong-doers. And yet, there’s an innocence to all of this. Click to read the Hi-Fructose exclusive interview with Joe Vaux.
Vibrant and bold, Oscar Joyo’s latest body of work which was exhibited at Thinkspace Projects in Los Angeles, vibrates the retina; while delving into his childhood memories childhood in Malawi and themes of Afrofuturism.
Something interesting happens when when artists like Alan and Carolynda Macdonald, who have the painting fundamentals mastered, decide to subvert expectations and perplex a viewers expectations conceptually. Click to read the Hi-Fructose exclusive interview.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List