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FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery
FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen - Signari Gallery

FAILE 'Star Spangled Shadows' (2023) Offset Lithograph on Linen

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'Star Spangled Shadows' by Faile, 2023
22 x 36 Inches
56 x 91.4 Centimeters
Offset lithograph print on 230gsm Linen fine art paper.
Limited Edition (Sold Out).
Hand-signed by the artist duo bottom right.
Noted with year of artist duo's first collaboration (1986) bottom left.

ARTIST BIO

FAILE (Pronounced "fail") is a Brooklyn-based artistic collaboration between Patrick McNeil (b. 1975, Edmonton, CA) and Patrick Miller (b. 1976, Minneapolis, MN). Since its inception in 1999, FAILE is known for their pioneering use of wheat-pasting and stenciling in the increasingly established arena of street art, and for their explorations of duality through a fragmented style of appropriation and collage.

During this time, FAILE adapted its signature mass culture-driven iconography to a wide array of media, from wooden boxes and window pallets to more traditional canvas, prints, sculptures, stencils, multimedia installation, and prayer wheels. While FAILE's work is constructed from found visual imagery, and blurs the line between “high” and “low” culture, recent exhibitions demonstrate an emphasis on audience participation, a critique of consumerism, and the incorporation of religious media and architecture into their work.