Michael Holman
Confederate Paintings
Early tribal cultures stuck sticks into shallow streambeds allowing the moving water to create geometric patterns/early symbolism. These stick designs created by the water’s dynamic fluidity were soon fashioned into symbols that represented “us” versus the “evil other.”

The swastika used by the ancient Greeks, represented churning waves. The Greek swastika, turned 45 degrees into the Nazi swastika, draws us further under and into the whirlpool of its oppressive visual powers.

The Confederate X is an even further reductive simplification—two sticks that meet at the intersection of southern nationalism. And though the Confederate flag no longer represents a nation divided and at war with itself, the flag still excites dread, trembling and bloodshed.

Through my paintings of the Confederate flag, I expand the symbolism beyond conventional Confederate ideology. Through the injection of new cultural signifiers I perform an act of deconstruction. The flag is owned by a new mind.

The flag is as simple as stationary sticks creating patterns in moving water. The flag is my ancestor Richard “Dick” Holman, a slave of mixed race, who was owned by his white father. As a Confederate soldier, Dick Holman dug breastworks, chest high trenches, for the Southern army during the Civil War. The painted flag is my progeny burning through the other side of my whirlpool in two beautiful millponds of selfhood. The flag rips apart the identity of both victim and perpetrator and lets the fragments whirl together into new meaning for the idiom of the sons of the Confederacy. No better definition of art.




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As a pioneer in both the downtown New York Art Scene and uptown Hip Hop, Michael Holman has been a force in contemporary New York culture and art. From starting an industrial art noise band with painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, to being a journalist, filmmaker, television producer and creative influence in Hip Hop Culture, Holman helped set the stage for a new epoch in world arts and culture.

Holman and Basquiat’s band Gray performed at various, historic venues including Hurrah’s, The Mudd Club, CBGB’s and The ICA in London, and has recorded music that has appeared in films such as “Downtown 81” and “Basquiat.” Holman created installation art at The Mudd Club, notably “The Soul Party” in 1980, and made short art films that premiered at The Mudd Club, Tier Three, The Ritz and other venues.

Holman and Nicholas Taylor performed sonic music performances at clubs such as Club USA, Sybarite, Nuyorican Poets Cafe and The Ritz where they opened for Todd Rundgren. As a filmmaker, Holman wrote the screenplay for the 1996 Miramax feature film “Basquiat,” directed by Julian Schnabel. Holman also wrote, produced and directed Children’s Television programming for the Nickelodeon Network, specifically “Blue’s Clues” and “Eureeka’s Kastle.”

As a Hip Hop impresario, journalist and producer, Holman was the first writer to use the term Hip Hop in print. Holman produced the first Hip Hop revue to ever perform on stage, opening for Malcolm McLaren’s band Bow Wow Wow at The Ritz in 1981. Holman opened “Negril,” the first Hip Hop nightclub in Downtown New York, then created, hosted and produced the first Hip Hop television show in 1984, “Graffiti Rock.” Holman created, managed, and choreographed the B-Boy dance crew The New York City Breakers, touring the world and performing for the likes of President Ronald Reagan and UK’s Prince Andrew. Holman helped produce the feature film, “Beat Street,” and wrote “Breaking,” a book on Hip Hop Culture for Scribner’s Publishing. The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame/Brooklyn Museum show: “Roots, Rhymes + Rage: The Hip Hop Story,” features Holman’s many Hip Hop artifacts and writings.

As an educator, Holman has taught courses at institutions such as Howard University in Washington, D.C. (where he taught screenwriting for seven years), the Photo Workshops in Maine, and New York City’s The New School For Social Research in Manhattan. As a lecturer on Contemporary Urban Culture and Art, Holman has spoken at the following institutions: The Whitney Museum, The Royal College of Art (London), Cox 18 (Milan), Austin Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum, Yale University, NYU, Rice University, the San Francisco Art Institute, Payne Weber Incorporated and RJ Reynolds Incorporated.

Working as a writer and journalist, Holman has written for The East Village Eye, ArtForum and Art Monthly.

As a filmmaker, Holman has won various awards, including: the Cable Industry Ace Award, for “Eureeka’s Kastle,” in 1988; Best Video Of The Year, Rolling Stone Magazine, for Run DMC music video “Christmas In Hollis,” in 1987; the Paulette Goddard Award, Best Film, NYU, for “Head’s, You Win,” in 1987 and an Emmy Nomination for the TV Special, “Graffiti Rock,” in 1984.

Working as a fine artist, Holman deconstructs the Confederate flag on canvas, recently showing his paintings at Miami Art Basel, both in 2007 and 2008.

Holman has a BA from the University of San Francisco and attended the NYU Graduate School of Film.

                                               
                                                 © Michael Holman  All Rights Reserved