GREGORY GREEN Home page

Bible Bomb #1893 Russian Style -1996- 33x27,5x9cm
Bible Bomb #1893 Russian Style [1996]
Suspicious looking package #23 -1993- 60x45x15cm
Suspicious looking package #23 [1993]
Gregory Green has exhibited widely in the United States and Europe and is represented in many prestigious collections, including the Saatchi collection, where he was included in the 1996 Young Americans exhibition.

Spacecake -1993- 5x24x24cm
Spacecake [1993]
Work Table #6 -1995- 140x232x330cm
Work Table #6 [1995]

RCSASM #4 (Mega Magnum) -1995- 570x180x180cm
A catalogue documenting the history of Green’s work is available.
For further information and photographs contact contact@aeroplastics.net



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RCSASM #4 (Mega Magnum) [1995]

Green’s ongoing body of work emphasises the power of non-violent means for effecting change in existing political and economic structures. This is expressed in utopian-like projects such as his current endeavour to form an officially recognised independent nation-state, The New Free State of Caroline, on an uninhabited and unclaimed South Pacific Island. Other works examine the possibilities for individual control of information and communication systems. Accordingly, he has created computer viruses as well as pirate FM radio and television stations capable of transmitting within a 0.25 mile range.

Gregnik an Alternative Space Program is one of Green’s most ambitious, yet deceivingly simple to achieve, projects to date. Referencing the launch of Sputnik, and in consideration of the global political repercussions it represented, Green is currently producing prototypes for a radio broadcast satellite capable of orbiting the Earth. It is interesting to consider that an artist from Brooklyn can research the information necessary to build a satellite only four decades after the first "Star Wars".