Blondey McCoy announces new London art show

Blondey McCoy announces new London art show
‘Us and Chem’ — The Palace skater’s latest exhibition blends antidepressants, mental health and a collaboration with Damien Hirst.

Blondey McCoy has been a staple of London’s Southbank skating scene for several years – quite a feat, considering he’s only 20.

Nothing about Blondey is typical. Seemingly unstoppable, the South West Londoner has his life astonishingly together, with over 100,000 followers on Instagram. He’s a successful model, a professional skateboarder for Palace, and the owner of his own streetwear-oriented clothing line, Thames London.

On top of all that, Blondey is an artist. Working with collage, his creations are distinctive for their straightforward mix-and-match aesthetic – taking that which is familiar and turning it on its head to make a statement. That includes the British monarchy, sex or, in the case of his latest exhibition, therapy and chemicals.

shot5

Trump’s face blends into a water jug, a bathtub hangs out underneath a chandelier, and prescription pill boxes are glued onto a mirror. Every piece offers a new insight into the corners of Blondey’s mind.

The show, entitled Us and Chem, is underlined by a discussion on mental health. There’s a strong sense of self-reflection, with the skater looking at his own relationship with productivity and art. It’s hosted at Heni Gallery and features original, unseen artwork, including a colourful collaboration with renowned British artist Damien Hirst.

“In feeling blue, tragically, the natural thing to do is stay blue,” Blondey reveals. “The creating of these new works has proven to me, more than ever before, that expressionism and making artwork is a way of temporarily exorcising that feeling.”

“The show was created out of a compulsion to create, not one to show off, throw a party or make money. It’s making has been a revelation in accepting the need to treat bipolar as a blessing rather than a curse, and to perpetually guarantee myself that from long hum drum periods of heightened sensitivity, my most genuine and life affirming artwork is born.”

shot4
shot2
shot3

Us and Chem by Blondey McCoy is on at Heni Gallery, open 10-6pm until August 27.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Latest on Huck

A peek behind the scenes of the UK’s village hall wrestling community
Huck 81

A peek behind the scenes of the UK’s village hall wrestling community

For the latest issue of Huck, photographer Adj Brown captures the transformation of a sedate Cornish village hall into a sell-out wrestling show.

Written by: Josh Jones

In photos: Inmates of the oldest women’s prison in the USA
Photography

In photos: Inmates of the oldest women’s prison in the USA

A new photobook, ‘Women Prisoner Polaroids’, revisits Jack Lueders-Booth’s seminal, humane portrait of women incarcerated in Massachusetts’ MCI Framingham.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Louis Stettner’s timeless portrait of mid-century America
Photography

Louis Stettner’s timeless portrait of mid-century America

In the largest retrospective yet of his work a new book and exhibition explores the legacy of the “world’s best-known unknown photographer”.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Jordan Stephens: “I don’t like using the term ‘Toxic Masculinity’ anymore”
Culture

Jordan Stephens: “I don’t like using the term ‘Toxic Masculinity’ anymore”

In the latest edition of our masculinity column ‘Daddy Issues’, the Rizzle Kicks singer and author talks about his childhood, vulnerability, his relationship with his mum and more.

Written by: Robert Kazandjian

In Photos: London’s young riders take over the city for Bikestormz
Photography

In Photos: London’s young riders take over the city for Bikestormz

Thousands of London’s most talented riders stormed the capital this weekend calling for bikes up, knives down.

Written by: Alex King

Celebrating Fire Island’s fabled “Invasion of the Pines”
Photography

Celebrating Fire Island’s fabled “Invasion of the Pines”

Photographer Phillip Gutman’s recent exhibition pays homage to an important chapter of LGBTQ history with a sumptuous array of hand printed scenes.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now