" data-ad-slot=""data-block-on-consent="_till_accepted"data-auto-format="rspv" data-full-width>
ART PROJECTS

Barbara Kruger Performa 17 Commission Detailed in New Film

" data-ad-slot=""data-block-on-consent="_till_accepted"data-auto-format="rspv" data-full-width>

Barbara Kruger Performa 17 Commission, a site-specific installation titled Untitled (Skate) at Coleman Skatepark in New York City is detailed in a new film that shows the installation process and how skateboarders related to the artworks. Image: Performa

ART PROJECT

A new film by Art21 details how Barbara Kruger went around New York creating her Performa 17 Commission that featured some of her thought-provoking works.

BY KAZAD

NEW YORK, NY— Art21 has announced a new film featuring Barbara Kruger’s Performa 17 Commission. Titled Untitled (Skate), the site-specific installation is at Coleman Skatepark in New York City’s Lower East Side. The film includes a group of skaters and Kruger’s works from multiple solo exhibitions at Mary Boone Gallery. Some works are from FOREVER, a 2017 site-specific exhibition at Sprüth Magers Berlin. 

Addressing Social Issues

For the Performa 17 Commission, Kruger traveled across New York City broadcasting messages addressing issues of power, desire, adoration, contempt, and capital. The messages were on a billboard in Chelsea and MetroCards distributed across four subway stations. Some were also on a yellow school bus, in a storefront shop in SoHo, and in one of New York’s most popular skate park underneath the Manhattan Bridge.

In explaining the origin of her Performa 17 Commission, Untitled (Skate) project, Kruger went back in time to her earliest influences and what led her to become an artist. She examines her life growing up in a working-class family in Newark, New Jersey before landing a job as a designer for Condé Nast publications.

Kruger explained how her design experience lent a fluency and directness to the development of her text-driven work. The experience of how people are influenced and shaped by the things they see around them are major factors that influenced Barbara Kruger’s works. With an amazing design sensibility, she wondered how she could use the medium of advertising to subvert the idea of advertising itself.

Barbara Kruger Art

Using the advertising techniques to engage viewers is at the core of Barbara Kruger’s Performa 17 Commission project.  While explaining what influenced Untitled (Skate) Kruger interrogates the power of money, elucidating how it shapes and inform societal values. Quoting some of the panels installed in the skatepark she asks: “Money talks. Whose values?”  She continues, “These are just ideas in the air and questions that we ask sometimes—and questions that we don’t ask but should ask.”

Related Post

This new film shows how Barbara Kruger continues to use the visual language of advertising to confront social and political issues, including subverting the very messages it emulates.  Kruger’s messages are not just direct in their communication with viewers, in some instances, they encourage them to engage in discussions of global issues including how consumerism and power affect their daily lives. For Barbara Kruger “Something to really think about is what makes us who we are in the world that we live in.” Above all, she wants viewers of her work to question everything they encounter   “And how culture constructs and contains us.”

Barbara Kruger and Media Effects

Well known across the globe for her work, Barbara Kruger explores media effects and strategies to create her work Her political and social messages focus on consumerism, mass media, and feminism. They are mostly on billboards, buses, newspapers, buildings, and parks. Her instantly recognizable visual style of delivering thought-provoking and terse phrases in white Futura Bold font over red blocks has influenced many people. Visual artists, graphic designers, mass media, and high fashion streetwear are now appropriating her style.

READ ALSO:

Have you seen Barbara Kruger’s works before? What do you think?  Join the art conversation: Share your thoughts. Follow Us: comments. FacebookTwitterInstagram

" data-ad-slot=""data-block-on-consent="_till_accepted"data-auto-format="rspv" data-full-width>
Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Blurring the Line Between Public Art and Modern Architecture

Blurring the line between public art and modern architecture explores how design, materials, and creativity reshape everyday spaces into artistic…

April 27, 2026

How Comic Conventions Became Immersive Events

The gap between what comic conventions once were and what immersive comic conventions are today reflects something much bigger happening…

April 27, 2026

How to Make a Rustic Home Feel More Airy

Make a rustic home feel more airy with smarter ceiling treatments, lighter window choices, edited surfaces, and furniture that opens…

April 26, 2026

Expand Your Creativity: Building a Backyard Art Studio

A backyard art studio is a focused space where your ideas can develop more freely. Here are some thoughtful design…

April 26, 2026

Blending Architecture And Art In Garden Design

See how architecture and art combine in garden design to shape outdoor spaces with structure, meaning, and visual impact that…

April 23, 2026

Designing Industrial Facilities for Flexibility

What factors make an industrial facility adaptable over time? Explore how design decisions influence flexibility, efficiency, and long-term use.

April 7, 2026