Packard Jennings Explained

Packard Jennings
Birth Place:Oakland, California, United States
Known For:Street art, conceptual art, culture jamming, sculpture, drawing
Education:New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University (MFA), San Francisco State University (BA)

Packard Jennings (born 1970) is an American visual artist. In his work he appropriates pop culture symbols and references to create new meaning using a variety of media including printmaking, sculpture, animation, video, and pamphleteering. In Jennings early career he modified billboards, a common practice of culture jammers. He has been working on a police mindfulness meditation project since 2012.

His work is in the collection of the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art,[1] and Di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art.[2] His work is in several books, including: “Art and Agenda” Gestalten, 2011, "We Own the Night (art of the Underbelly Project)” Rizzoli, 2011 and "Urban Interventions" Gestalten, 2010. His shopdropping work 'Anarchist Action figure was described on the front page of The New York Times.[3]

Themes

Works

Shopdropping

Jennings has made major contributions to the practice of "shopdropping" (a term coined around 2004 to describe the covert placing of art or propaganda into stores). Jennings was a very early practitioner of what was to become "shopdropping". He was the first to covertly place a completely hand-made art object into a store with his 1998 with his Walmart Project, which features seven art products placed in Walmart stores, including the Mussolini Action Figure,[5] which are humorously critical of aspects of their business practice. Other shopdropped works include: A Day at The Mall (pamphlet), Welcome to Geneva (pamphlet), the Anarchist Action Figure, Walgreens Local Business Coupon, and the Pocket Survival Guide.

Lawsuits

Jennings was legally threatened by Chiquita Banana [6] for posting fake Chiquita Banana stickers that said 'Chemical' on his website Destructables.org. He responded to the Chiquita with three more designs based on Chiquita Banana business practice, including: Deforest, Cocaine, and Terrorism.

Jennings sent a cease and f**king desist[7] letter to a tech company that used his artwork in their ad to find a new employee. He won a settlement.

Destructables.org

In 2011, Jennings launched Destructables.org. The site states:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Fine Arts Collection at UC Davis jan shrem and maria manetti shrem museum of art. manettishremmuseum.ucdavis.edu. 17 November 2015 . 2019-05-04.
  2. Web site: The Collection. dirosaart.org. 3 July 2010 . 2016-11-03.
  3. News: Anarchists in the Aisles? Stores Provide a Stage. Urbina. Ian. 2007-12-24. The New York Times. 2019-05-04. en-US. 0362-4331.
  4. Web site: Frauenfelder . Mark . 2007-08-20 . Packard Jennings' "Business Reply Pamphlet" . 2023-02-09 . Boing Boing . en-US.
  5. Web site: Mussolini Action Figure shopdropping at Wal-mart - video dailymotion. Dailymotion. en. 2019-05-04.
  6. Web site: Chiquita Banana Threatens Legal Action Against Emeryville Artist Packard Jennings. Richards. Kathleen. East Bay Express. 28 March 2018 . en. 2019-05-04.
  7. Web site: Oakland Artist Talks About his Battle with Tech Exec Over Image. 2015-04-28. KQED. en-us. 2019-05-04.