Forbidden Knowledge 11 has now made its way out of the studio to the 2014 subscribers! This series is Acrylic and Ink on Paper. All works are 9 x 12 inches. (ed 12/12 pictured)
Archive for the 2014 Category
November: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on December 9, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionOctober: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on October 28, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionJune: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on July 17, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionMay: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on July 17, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionApril: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on May 6, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionMarch: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on April 4, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionFebruary: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on March 14, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionJanuary: Forbidden Knowledge
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on February 18, 2014 by drawingsubscriptionHappy Endings
Posted in 2013, 2014, Apparitions, Dark Continuum, Forbidden Knowledge on December 16, 2013 by drawingsubscription2013 is wrapping up and the final installments of both Dark Continuum (The full-year drawing subscription) and Apparitions (The quarterly drawing subscription) are headed out to subscribers. It has been a particularly busy year on pretty much every front, but I’m very excited to have had the opportunities that were presented me this year, and look forward to the things that are falling in place for 2014.
Forbidden Knowledge the 2014 subscription is off to a great start, and interested parties have until December 31st to get on board. We’ll be shipping all across the country as well as Internationally during this fourth year, so Don’t miss out.
Forbidden Knowledge the 2014 Drawing Subscription
Posted in 2014, Forbidden Knowledge on November 1, 2013 by drawingsubscriptionThe Black Laboratory of Vincent Como is proud to reveal: Forbidden Knowledge the 2014 Drawing Subscription.
“The essential element in the black art of obscurantism is not that it wants to darken individual understanding, but that it wants to blacken our picture of the world, and darken our idea of existence.” – Friedrich Nietzsche
Much like Rauschenberg’s infamous Erased DeKooning Drawing, the Forbidden Knowledge series will be based on the traces of what has been left behind once a material thought becomes eradicated, obscured, or reconsidered. Over the course of 2014 this series will see itself shifting in and out of focus to call into question what was, and what is yet to become. Like a scrying mirror, or a redacted CIA document, these works will be a way for the viewer to interface with the past while simultaneously divining the future.