KAWS picks his favourite works at Frieze Masters

Arts

Brian Donnelly, aka KAWS, has long been an avid art collector, beginning as a young graffiti artist trading sketch books with friends. For the past 20 years, the US artist and designer has nosed around galleries buying works by his favourite artists, including Raymond Pettibon and Robert Crumb, from dealers such as David Zwirner. Although he did not grow up with art at home (“unless you count paintings of the woods”) he says “collecting was ever present, if not conscious”. His preference: Star Wars editions from the 1970s. KAWS studied at New Yorks School of Visual Arts, “looking at Bouguereau [during the day] and then doing freight trains [at night]”. So when we asked KAWS, who is in town for his new show, Blackout, at Skarstedt gallery, to tour Frieze Masters with us, a similarly eclectic mix of works caught his eye.

Courtesy of Hong Kong Contemporary Art Foundation

Having spent the first year of his career animating for Disney, KAWS took inspiration from Mickey Mouse when creating his "Companions"

© David Owens

Roy Lichtenstein, Flower in Vase and Flowers (both 1982), Castelli Gallery, New York: “These are so nice. I have a Lichtenstein painting of a De Kooning Woman; thats what these feel like. They satisfy my appreciation of the graphic line. They would look as beautiful on a stamp as they would on the side of a ten-storey building block. He has that quality that can just expand or contract.”

© David Owens

H.C. Westermann, Confined Murderer (1955), walnut, bronze, Venus Over Manhattan, New York: “I got into Westermann through his watercolours; his drawings sucked me in when I saw Eye Infection at the Stedelijk in Amsterdam. I started to collect his drawings, then I got into his sculptures. This piece is super early. There are a few artists I have tunnel vision with—like Westermann and Peter Saul. The character in the sculpture is so alone. But I also love the woodwork, the rivets: its so tactile. If you turn it upside down, youll find the subject written on the base or on the back. The thing about Westermann is theyre just so nice to handle. Thats not really reflective of my work because the last thing I want somebody to do is touch one of my things as they have such delicate surfaces…”

© David Owens

Keith Haring, Vase (1981), Skarstedt: “This work is a great rare example of his three-dimensional work that seems to have no beginning and end.” Another artist that caught KAWSs eye is Armando Testa at Galleria Continua: “I was really impressed by his graphic paintings, especially Elefante Pirelli (1954).”

© David Owens

Wenzel Jamnitzer, Perspectiva. Nuremberg (1568), first edition, from a special collection of artists manuals on perspective and human proportion, Jörn Günther Rare Books, Stalden, Switzerland: “I love books. I dont know if its from having blackbooks or because Ive been lucky enough to have some artists sketchbooks; its just that real intimacy you experience. These are amazing. Im currently completely immersed in thinking about working in virtual reality, augmented reality, and then I see something extraordinary that is dated so early. The shapes are gorgeous. I love the way the outer borders just wrap around and go into each other, creating a sort of infinity.”

© David Owens

Eileen Gray, Non-conformist Armchair (1925-28), Gilles Peyroulet & Cie, Paris: “I would have this chair in my dream flat. Its funny, because I love this, but normally when I am looking at design, I like organic fuRead More – Source