from
verbicide 22
heart
of the city
using striking block
prints and bold color, detroit artist kevin o’rourke
recaptures the energy and architectural elegance
of the motor city.
>>by
agent automatic>>artwork
by kevin o’rourke
Kevin O’Rourke is part of
a new generation of Motor City artists. This low-key
powerhouse fuses elements of graphic design and
advertising verve into frenetic rock art that’s
cool as liquid nitrogen. He recently produced
both the movie poster and onscreen credits for
It Came From Detroit, a film about the reincarnation
of Detroit’s garage scene by bands like
The Detroit Cobras, Bantam Rooster, and The Dirtbombs.
Being a rock artist, graphic designer, and illustrator
makes Kevin one of the hardest working artists
in the Motor City, and his ball-busting work ethic
means that he always has multiple projects going.
However, despite the long hours, he admits, “I
like getting feedback from other artists and music
fans. Fine art keeps me sane.”
During his short but prolific career, Kevin has
produced concert posters for everybody from Lucinda
Williams and Flogging Molly to Sonic Youth and
Ween. His scrappy Irish countenance reveals a
tendency to forgo artistic arrogance and move
between the realm of fine art and more commercially
accessible graphic design. Despite his ascending
stature in the world of pop art, you’ll
never see Kevin wearing a paint-splattered smock
or resale store beret. Instead, Kevin looks more
like an extra from Martin Scorcese’s
The Departed.
Before moving to Detroit, Kevin cut his artistic
teeth doing graphic design in Chicago. These days,
he’s trying his hand at tattooing and has
produced more poster art for the nationally ranked
Detroit Roller Derby League than any other artist.
But Kevin’s love for Detroit doesn’t
stop there — his block art prints of classic
Detroit buildings embody his passion for the city.
“I like character, and Detroit has a lot
of it. Its buildings are graphically vibrant.
Detroit’s one of the coolest cities I’ve
ever lived in. Other leagues ask me to do art
for them, but I don’t have the time. [The
Detroit Derby league] are my girls, and I love
‘em.”
Kevin brings art into every facet of his life,
including living in a building designed by the
great Dutch Modernist Miles van der Rohe. The
complex, called Lafayette Plaza, “is like
an Oasis,” states O’Rourke. “There’s
nothing like it in the rest of Detroit. It’s
a self-contained community. It has a lot of character
overall, but each unit is identical. Everything
is minimal. Miles van der Rohe even coined the
phrase less is more.” However, O’Rourke’s
style — if he can be said to have a single
style — uses elements of commercial advertising
to create a current of bold colors, explosive
shapes, and clearly defined messages. Much like
a club DJ, Kevin samples influences from disparate
sources to create something new, a reconfiguration
in which the base elements are powerfully redefined
in proximity to one another. Kevin’s art
can be seen at www.crownvicproductions.com.
from top to bottom:
Wood block prints of Saint Andrews, Tiger Stadium,
music venue Harpo’s
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