John John Jesse
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies. (December 2008) |
John John Jesse | |
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Born | 1969[1] |
Nationality | American |
Education | self-taught |
Known for | Painting |
Movement | Pop Surreal, Cartoon-Tainted Abstract Surrealism |
John John Jesse is an illustrative painter from New York City's Lower East Side in the Juxtapoz gonzo-pop vein. He often shows with artists like Esao Andrews. Jesse has cited Gustav Klimpt, Carravagio, Béla Iványi-Grünwald, and Mark Ryden as influences[2]
He painted the girls he grew up with,[3] citing the punk lifestyle of girls and drugs. Most of the people featured in his work are friends of his. They are generally nude or partially disrobed, in situations that are both fantastical and gritty. Jesse has, to date, two self declared series of renderings. The first consisting of black & white drawings he calls the "Baby Demonica" series and the second, full color paintings he calls the "Demonica Erotica" series.[4]
Jesse also played bass in the New York Crust punk band Nausea[5] and designed posters and album art for bands like Agnostic Front.[6] He is a former guitar player for the band Morning Glory.[7]
In 2005, Vivian Giourousis interviewed the artist for Hoard magazine and asked him to define punk rock. He replied, "…punk rock was the world in which I entered at 14 years old because I didn't fit in anywhere, not at school, not with friends, and not with my family. Back in the 80's we were all serious misfits who didn't belong, and together we were REALLY united. We all came from broken homes, we were victims of child abuse, we were angry, political, idealistic, drunk and proud. Basically punk rock music goes beyond the realms of just being a music scene. It's a lifestyle and commitment. It's my world, and honestly it's all I know and it's where I fit."