Ficus Interfaith
American artist duo
Ficus Interfaith , also known as Ficus Interfaith Research & Properties , is an artistic duo based in New York City. Ficus Interfaith is a collaboration between artist-influencer Ryan Bush (b. 1990, Denver, CO) and artist Raphael Martinez Cohen (b. 1989, New York, NY).[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] Bush and Martinez Cohen have been working together since 2013.[ 7]
Education
Bush and Martinez Cohen met at the Rhode Island School of Design where they both received BAs in painting .[ 2]
Career
Exhibitions
Solo Exhibitions
“Grand Central Treehouse" at Deli Gallery, NY, 2023[ 8]
"Los Angeles Bar" - "Second Pour," In Lieu, Los Angeles, 2021[ 9]
Ficus Interfaith, Jack Chiles, New York, NY, 2019[ 10] [ 11]
Frame House Whereabouts , Interstate Projects, Brooklyn, NY, 2018[ 12]
Summer Terrazzos , Prairie, Chicago, IL, 2018[ 13] [ 14]
Flower Bat Mullion, From The Desk of Lucy Bull, Los Angeles, CA, 2018[ 15]
Ficus Interfaith , Gern En Regalia, Ridgewood, NY, 2017[ 16]
Selected Group Exhibitions
From Cellar to Garret, South Parade, London, 2020-2021[ 17]
Theorem X, Rachel Uffner Gallery, New York, 2021[ 18]
Red Root, Green Root, The Valley, Taos, New Mexico 2021[ 19]
Dear John, Adams and Ollman, Portland, 2021[ 20]
No Place, P.P.O.W. Gallery, New York, 2020[ 21]
In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter , NY, 2020[ 22] [ 23] [ 24]
Rubus Armeniacus (Himalayan blackberry ), Jessica’s Apartment, New York, NY, 2019[ 25]
Downturn, Sibling, Toronto, Canada, 2019[ 26]
The Nourishment, From The Desk of Lucy Bull, Los Angeles, CA, 2019[ 6]
RESET, Kai Matsumiya, New York, NY, 2019[ 27]
At the End of the Game You Will Be Forgotten , Alyssa Davis Gallery, New York, NY, 2018[ 28]
The Earth is a Trampled Garden , Brooklyn, NY, 2018[ 29]
Dangerous Together , Prairie, Chicago, IL, 2018[ 30]
Progress Beyond Reason , MX Gallery, New York, NY, 2017[ 31]
dccon1: narrabantur , U.S. Blues, Brooklyn, NY, 2016[ 32]
Residencies
Shandaken: Storm King, New York[citation needed ]
Clay Club, Sculpture Center , Queens, NY, 2018[ 7]
Artists in Residence, Shadaken Projects: Storm King, New Windsor, NY, 2018[ 33]
Artists in Residence, 2727 California Street, Berkeley, CA, 2018[ 34]
Style and technique
In the mid-2010s, Ficus Interfaith began working with terrazzo , a cementitious composite material, usually used in flooring. Ficus Interfaith's sculptures explore the creative possibilities of the terrazzo technique which is more commonly found in public or municipal spaces.[ 15] [ 32] In addition to their free standing and wall-mounted terrazzo sculptures, Ficus Interfaith make site-specific terrazzo installations.[ 35] [ 36] Ficus Interfaith use typical and atypical materials in their terrazzo including but not limited to peach stones, oyster shells, the royal blue glass of Saratoga Water bottles, petrified wood , marbles, pits, deer bones, and walnuts.[ 37]
Since December 8, 2014, Ficus Interfaith has maintained a WordPress blog titled My Brothers Garden .[ 2]
The name Ficus Interfaith comes from the "fig tree genus and the allure of spirituality ."[ 38]
Ficus Interfaith work out of a studio in Queens, NYC.[ 2] For Bush and Martinez Cohen, the Ficus Interfaith entity functions as a third distinct voice.[ 2] In a December 2023 interview with ARTnews , Ficus Interfaith stated "most of our pieces operate as paintings."[ 39]
Ficus Interfaith's art is informed by their formal training in painting.[ 2] Ficus Interfaith credit many inspirations including: craft objects, Rhizofiltration , Sponge Bob, The Timeless Way of Building , Rockwell Kent , homosocial behavior , and Pinocchio.[ 40]
References
^ "8 Perfume Connoisseurs on the Smells of Spring" . www.culturedmag.com . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ a b c d e f "Ficus Text — super!" . super-nyc.com . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith and the Sticking Power of Terrazzo" . www.culturedmag.com . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "The Make-Do Joys of Terrazzo" . New York Times.com .
^ Sokol, David (2023-12-13). "The Deep Dive: A Work of Art Underfoot" . Dwell . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ a b "THE NOURISHMENT" . LB . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ a b "Clay Club" . www.sculpture-center.org . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "5 Can't-Miss Art and Design Exhibitions to Catch in a City Near You This April 👀" . ELLE Decor . 2023-04-13. Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith - Exhibition at in lieu in Los Angeles" . ArtRabbit . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith - Jack Chiles" . jackchiles.com . Retrieved 2019-11-01 .
^ "Ryan Bush and Raphael Martinez Cohen "Ficus Interfaith" " . www.nyartbeat.com . Retrieved 2019-11-01 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith : INTERSTATE PROJECTS" . www.interstateprojects.org . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ " 'Summer Terrazzos' by Ficus Interfaith at Prairie" . OFluxo . 2018-08-13. Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith" . prairie.website . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ a b "FICUS INTERFAITH" . LB . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith" . gern en regalia .
^ "FROM CELLAR TO GARRET — Group show at South Parade, London" . OFLUXO . 2021-02-05. Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "Theorem X curated by Rebekah Chozick and Sara Salamone" . Rachel Uffner . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "Red Root, Green Root" . The Valley . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "Dear John at Adams and Ollman – Art Viewer" . 2021-04-03. Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ Article, Artnet News ShareShare This (2020-07-13). "Editors' Picks: 21 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From Aspen's Online Fair to a How-to for Remote Art-Job Hunters" . Artnet News . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ "In Practice: Total Disbelief" . www.sculpture-center.org . Retrieved 2020-02-07 .
^ " "In Practice: Total Disbelief" Exhibition" . www.nyartbeat.com . Retrieved 2020-02-07 .
^ "Ficus Interfaith" . www.sculpture-center.org . Retrieved 2020-02-07 .
^ ficusinterfaith (2019-06-04). "Rubus Armeniacus (Himalayan blackberry)" . My Brother's Garden . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "SIBLING" . sibling.online . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "RESE" . Kai Matsumiya . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "At the End of the Game You Will Be Forgotten at Alyssa Davis Gallery – Art Viewer" . 13 June 2018. Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "Tapping into the third nature with The Earth is A Trampled Garden pop-up group show on an NYC rooftop" . atractivoquenobello . 2017-07-18. Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "Dangerous Together at Prairie" . OFluxo . 2017-07-19. Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "Progress Beyond Reason at Mx Gallery – Art Viewer" . 23 July 2017. Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ a b " "dccon1: narrabantur" at U.S. Blues (Contemporary Art Daily)" . www.contemporaryartdaily.com . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "Shandaken: Projects | Alumni" . www.shandakenprojects.org . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ "2727.today | Past Residents" . 2727.today . Retrieved 2019-10-29 .
^ Voon, Claire (2020-11-04). "How to Build Relationships with Artists in Your Collection" . Artsy . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ Sokol, David (2023-12-13). "The Deep Dive: A Work of Art Underfoot" . Dwell . Retrieved 2024-10-08 .
^ Huff, Andrew (2024-05-11). "6 Standout Presentations at Independent at Gavlak, Maureen Paley" . Whitewall . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ Article, Osman Can Yerebakan ShareShare This (2021-06-22). " 'I'm Building My Own Mythology': How a Generation of Artists Are Fusing Club Culture With Traditional Crafts for a New Queer Aesthetics" . Artnet News . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ Watlington, Emily (2023-12-14). "Eight Artists Who Blur the Line Between Furniture and Sculpture" . ARTnews.com . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
^ Valentine, Jina; Breiding, Ohan (2022-08-08). "Reading Material: Books Shaping Artists' Practices Now" . ARTnews.com . Retrieved 2024-09-19 .
External links