Joanne Ludwig - "Cenote"
Cone 5 Recycled Clay with Amaco Glaze and Glaze.
WorthyFoe was raised in the Bay Area during the 80s Hip Hop Culture. They participated in various activities such as dancing in crews, playing b-ball, and sharpening their handstyle in blackbooks and on walls. As a youth, they found ways to engage with the community through the elements of Hip Hop, especially art-making, which has remained a channel for their community involvement through curating, teaching, and travel. This abstract representational artist uses charcoal, paint, clay, and foraged objects to explore themes such as ancient futurism, nature deities, plant medicine, dreamwork, and the supernatural. Their most notable works include community altars, public murals, and ritual objects. Worthy Foe's artwork can be seen on walls, galleries, and public spaces throughout California, Cuba, and Mexico.
Cone 5 Recycled Clay with Amaco Glaze and Glaze.
WorthyFoe was raised in the Bay Area during the 80s Hip Hop Culture. They participated in various activities such as dancing in crews, playing b-ball, and sharpening their handstyle in blackbooks and on walls. As a youth, they found ways to engage with the community through the elements of Hip Hop, especially art-making, which has remained a channel for their community involvement through curating, teaching, and travel. This abstract representational artist uses charcoal, paint, clay, and foraged objects to explore themes such as ancient futurism, nature deities, plant medicine, dreamwork, and the supernatural. Their most notable works include community altars, public murals, and ritual objects. Worthy Foe's artwork can be seen on walls, galleries, and public spaces throughout California, Cuba, and Mexico.
Cone 5 Recycled Clay with Amaco Glaze and Glaze.
WorthyFoe was raised in the Bay Area during the 80s Hip Hop Culture. They participated in various activities such as dancing in crews, playing b-ball, and sharpening their handstyle in blackbooks and on walls. As a youth, they found ways to engage with the community through the elements of Hip Hop, especially art-making, which has remained a channel for their community involvement through curating, teaching, and travel. This abstract representational artist uses charcoal, paint, clay, and foraged objects to explore themes such as ancient futurism, nature deities, plant medicine, dreamwork, and the supernatural. Their most notable works include community altars, public murals, and ritual objects. Worthy Foe's artwork can be seen on walls, galleries, and public spaces throughout California, Cuba, and Mexico.