Cats aren't dogs. Anyone who has ever asked a cat to come to them will recognize this pattern.
WHO Matt Vescovo, the self-proclaimed Master Of The Obvious, is
driven to make things easier to understand. A successful freelance
advertising art director based in Brooklyn, he began creating
paintings in a flat diagrammatic style as an outlet for creative
energy away from the commercial demands of his day job. “I began
exploring those simple things we all do,” says Vescovo, “I’ve always
been interested in the details of everyday life. How do things
really
work? Why do people do what they do? What are the rituals we all
do, even if we don’t admit them?” Answering these questions and
more is what drives the series of observational drawings Vescovo
calls
Instructoart.
WHAT
All Instructoart pieces are based on photographs of friends
and family that Vescovo stages, then meticulously renders in
detail—but not too much detail—to create instructional graphics
that inform and amuse. How do you put money in a stripper’s
g-string? What is the best way to remove pubic hair from
the soap after a shower? What’s the correct way to signal your
waiter that you’d like the check? How do you actually “air kiss”
anyway? He puts an irreverent twist on the answers, explaining
it all in a wordless way that seems to be inspired by those little
cards you find in airplane seat pockets that tell you what to do in
an emergency.
WHERE
Beyond apparently innocuous subjects, Vescovo has also taken on
topics that make viewers uncomfortable. “Mighty Scared Whitie”
documents the trajectory of white fiight when two men, one black
and one white, approach each other on a city street, while “Gay.
Straight.” illustrates a typical gesture of familiarity among men
but shows its relative contextual meaning. Vescovo’s simple drawings
make us think.
Black & Curly. Private rituals we surprisingly all seem to engage in are often the subject of Instructoart diagrams.
Nearly all the
Instructoart info graphics started out as limitededition
large format fine artworks. The original drawings were
shown first at the Galleria Ramis Barquet in Manhattan, and subsequently
at the Mendenhall Sobieski Gallery in Los Angeles,
Espacio Arte Joven in Mexico City, and the Stediljk Museum in
The Netherlands. The sharp humor and wry commentary in these
drawings led MTV executives to commission Vescovo, working
with animators at Hornet NY and Fad NY, to create a series of
short animated films that became network IDs and interstitials
at the MTV Video Music Awards in 2004. Since then Vescovo has
parlayed
Instructoart into a successful series of products, never selling
out, staying true to his original vision. “I’ve been lucky that I
haven’t had to compromise,” says Vescovo.
WHEN
He’s done several book editions of the self-titled Instructoart and
the Instructoart Travel Edition (with handy plastic cover), and a
book called The Life And Death of “Bling Bling,” a cautionary tale of
the misappropriation of urban slang. Vescovo hopes to keep telling
us how to do things, spinning Instructoart into more books,
a series of animated shorts for distribution on cell phones and
PDAs, and more gallery shows.
WHY
Instructoart has been likened to the hit TV show Seinfeld, in that
nothing much really happens, but it tickles the funny bone in an
ironic kind of recognition that somehow intimates that you’ve
been there too. Vescovo seems to latch on to the uncool moments
in life and find the humor in them. According to Vescovo’s publisher,
Jorge Pinto Books, “Instructoart’s appeal comes from Matt’s
ability to tap into the truth about people.” In his charming flat
drawings, Vescovo gives us vital advice for everyday living. When
it comes to figuring out how to do the Hokey Pokey or making fart
noises with our armpits, who are we going to ask? It’s got to be the
Master Of The Obvious. Who else?
MATT VESCOVO | www.instructoart.com
TOP: That's what it's all about. Frustrated with random interpretations he witnessed at parties, Matt Vescovo broke down the official way to do the Hokey Pokey.