SPLICED Magazine Issue 02 Dec/Jan 2014 | Page 29

SPLICED LIFE / CREATIVE PROFILE / SKULLBOY ISSUE 02 Where does the pseudonym come from? I’ve always had sketchbooks as a kid but graffiti was what gave me a real direction and interest in what I’m doing now, so obviously as soon as you pick up a spraycan you have to adopt some bizarre alterego. A few years and a few aliases later, ‘Skullboy’ is the one that stuck. So I’ve been working as ‘Skullboy’ since about 2006/7 and regret choosing that name every day. Your work often dances along the border between pessimistically dark and idealistically vulnerable (take for example the collaboration with Lesley Tuchten on ‘Tar Heart’). That’s what I think makes you so intriguing as an artist. Would you say your work’s an accurate portrayal of your view of the world? Yeah of course – I constantly use my work to analyse my own beliefs and opinions. I think it all stems from an interest in the human race. I’m still trying to get my head around how we as people (myself included) are so incredible and dynamic but yet have this unwavering ability to completely fuck things up. Humans really are a terrible species. We’re all fucked, we’re always going to be fucked, we’re just sitting around waiting to see how we can invent new ways of fucking things up. Your 2012 exhibition, You & Me (A Series Of First Times) is one of those ‘I wish I thought of it first’ concepts and essentially a collaboration with 100’s of anonymous participants. Tell us about the experience, and how it all came together. That project came together after a few drunken conversations with friends about ‘our first times’. It was an eye-opener and a real treat to be let into people’s most intimate milestones. From there, I basically took research from anonymous participants at a few local bars and gathered stories of their sexual debuts. From those, I created 100 artworks based on the research. It was a long, hard and emotionally taxing project but it was fuckin’ worth it. It certainly didn’t bring me the art world recognition I thought it would but it certainly helped me understand people a lot better. 29