Lee Scratch Perry
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Human-crafted. AI-refined.This artwork features a striking composition with a central black and white photographic portrait of a man surrounded by bold yellow shapes and abstract designs. The image is playful and vibrant, with the artist employing a unique blend of photographic and graphic elements. The subject's gaze is intense and engaging, drawing the viewer into the piece. The overall style and technique convey a rebellious, nonconformist spirit, possibly reflecting the artist's intention to challenge traditional artistic norms or make a broader societal commentary. ...
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Lee Scratch Perry
1961 , JamaicaLee Scratch Perry (1936 – 2021) was born in a remote Jamaican village in 1936 and moved to Kingston in 1961 to pursue a career in music after a divine voice directed him there. After founding the infamous Black Ark Studio he produced some of Bob Marley’s most renowned songs and became one of the pioneering forces in the development of dub and reggae music. The studio was burned down a few years later, and Perry led a nomadic life before settling between the Swiss countryside. Perry has worked with artists including Bob Marley and the Wailers, Junior Murvin, the Beastie Boys, and The Clash, among many others, and was awarded a Grammy for Best Reggae Album in 2003. By the end of the Seventies Perry started painting occult symbols and dub-collages around his studio, which gradually developed into a multidisciplinary Gesamtkunstwerk practice. Often imbued with spirituality, Perry’s visual output had since taken the form of multi-layered clusters that continually shift and change; creating an ever- expanding network of paradisal animals, cartoon figures and saints using paint, mirrors, rocks, photographs, video and computer-transmitted word-association poems – in a ceaseless quest to venerate the Almighty. ...