Stars Like Katy Perry and Weird Al Collaborate with Pop-Surrealist Mark Ryden

Recently, while trying to wrap my head around the pop-surrealist art movement, I stumbled across a video showing a painting of a creepy, big-eyed Katy Perry likeness reclined amongst flowers and forest animals with audio of the famous pop singer covering the 1892 song “Daisy Bell.” I found similar videos featuring Tyler the Creator, Weird Al Yankovic, and Nick Cave.

The Daisy Bell project is the brainchild of artist Mark Ryden, a cornerstone of the pop-surrealist or lowbrow art movement who blends the dream-like qualities of surrealism with kitsch and modern iconography. Ryden’s work often features Abe Lincoln, dewey-eyed children, the Virgin Mary, and raw meat.

Ryden worked as a commercial illustrator during the 90’s and produced album covers for Aerosmith, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Michael Jackson, and others.  

He commissioned musical artists to sing “Daisy Bell” and created an album in conjunction with the opening of his 2014 “The Gay 90s: West” exhibit at Los Angeles’s Kohn Gallery.

Employing the visual trappings of the formally idealized 1890s in America—women dressed in satin skirts with large bows, large wheeled bicycles, Main St. USA, vaudevillian stages—Ryden recreates scenes from this marginalized slice of pop culture,” reads the Kohn Gallery website.

The songs were made into 999 vinyl records sold for $99. Ryden donated half the proceeds from sales to Little Kids Rock, a nonprofit dedicated to promoting music education in public schools. Many also survive on YouTube and are featured here in hopes of leaving you perplexed.

 

Resources:

“Tyler, the Creator, Nick Cave, Katy Perry Cover ‘Daisy Bell’ for Charity” Spin

“Mark Ryden” ArtNet

“Mark Ryden, The Gay 90s West” Kohn Gallery

About Carter

Theodore Carter is the author of Stealing The Scream, Frida Sex Dreams and Other Unnerving Disruptions, and The Life Story of a Chilean Sea Blob and Other Matters of Importance. His fiction has appeared in The North American Review, Pank, Necessary Fiction, and elsewhere. Carter’s street art projects have earned attention from The Washington Post, The Washington City Paper, several D.C. TV news stations, and other outlets. In 2019, he organized the Night of 1,000 Fridas, an event spanning 5 continents that brought over 1,000 images of Frida Kahlo out into public view on the same night. More at www.theodorecarter.com.

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