Mounds vs. Vegans
In drawings and paintings, Trenton Doyle Hancock pits archetypes against each other
- By Amy Crawford
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Are the Vegans a stand-in for people who push their morality on others?
Exactly. Instead of using Christianity or any other institution or religion that can become dogmatic, I decided, why not take [veganism] to an absurd level.
So your work is allegorical.
I think sometimes my stories start to lean toward a moral, but in the end it's up to each viewer to choose which way to go. I don't like to point and say, “This is the right way."
Your career has been successful so far, especially considering that you're still young. What are you most proud of?
That I've set goals and reached them. Having my work in a gallery, having work in a museum setting.
Was it always your plan to be an artist?
I was that geeky kid who sat in the back of the class and just drew pictures. I didn't ever want to be a fireman or a doctor or anything else. I just wanted to be an artist.
A former editorial assistant at Smithsonian, Amy Crawford is a student at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism.
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Comments (1)
THis is a very cool man he is still young and already has art in a museum. Plus after looking at some of the art he does a good jod at making the objects look bigger. If I were going to be an artist i would truly look up to this man.
Posted by Junior Mintz on September 22,2011 | 08:01 AM