BD White

Statement/Bio

B.D. White entered the art scene by painting hundreds of streetlight bases throughout New York City. Despite his spinal injury, he earned a reputation as a prolific street artist using spray paint and stencils as his main medium.

From the beginning B.D. knew he was always going to be an artist. What he didn’t count on was a sporting accident at the age of 18 that left him with a broken back, paralyzed and in a wheelchair. The art world is highly competitive and getting the initial show or big break is sometimes slow in coming. Undeterred, B.D. decided to take his works directly to the public via the gallery known as the streets of New York. What some call “street art,” B.D. dubs “mindful vandalism” and despite his inability to easily flee if discovered, B.D. began to create compelling art on the streets in both Manhattan and Brooklyn. Taking advantage of his seated position, his works were uniquely placed very low on walls and street lamps, areas where others may not have thought of using.

The artwork's aesthetic appeal and poignant messaging stood out, like “The Hashtagger”, a bronze sculpture that is far from your usual hastily sprayed tags and simple wheat paste works. It is Rodin’s Thinker sculpture with a modern update; an iPhone.

Inspired by Shepard Fairey's style, B.D. has taken the stencil technique to unprecedented levels of complexity; utilizing 60 to 95 stencil layers per painting. The works are visually stunning, however the concept and message are most interesting. B.D.’s recent works depicts an astronaut in multiple states of movement, sometimes alone, sometimes entwined in a tragic embrace with a female form. The astronaut represents man at his most lonely and distant self, though present in many of the paintings with the female love interest, the seemingly insurmountable obstacle of love lost, and longing is obvious.

B.D. White is not the first artist to overcome physical limitations. When his hands became to arthritic to paint, Renoir strapped brushes to his wrists and continued on and Chuck Close overcame near total paralysis to continue as one of the most significant living American artists. B.D. expertly demonstrate that nothing can dampen or contain an artist’s almost instinctual, obsessive need to create and share with the world.

To date, B.D. has shown in group exhibitions in New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Chicago, Miami, and Berlin. An installation at the World Trade Center, exposure at Scope Art Fair during Art Basel in Miami, a month long solo show at Castle Fitzjohns Gallery in Manhattan, as well as his continued work on the streets of New York; have garnered him a strong and growing collector base.

Disability

Paralyzed with a complete spinal cord injury at levels T-5, T-6 and T-10 in 2002 at the age of 18 from a pole vaulting accident. I missed the mats and landed in the metal box where you plant the pole.


I Asked Myself For Peace You Will Never Be Alone All The Beautiful Things I Wish I Could Show You I'm Burning Down
I Asked Myself For Peace
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on canvas
60" x 36"
You Will Never Be Alone
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on canvas
60" x 36"
All The Beautiful Things I Wish I Could Show You
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on wood panel
72" x 52"
I'm Burning Down
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on wood panel
48" x 36"
She Was Magnificent To Feel Your Heart As It's Keeping Time A Memory's Distant Glimmer I Can Not Sleep When You're Awake
She Was Magnificent
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on wood panel
54" x 40" & 54" x 40" Diptych
To Feel Your Heart As It's Keeping Time
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on wood panel
60" x 42"
A Memory's Distant Glimmer
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on wood panel
54" x 40" & 54" x 40" Diptych
I Can Not Sleep When You're Wide Awake
2017
acrylic spray paint and bronze patina on wood panel
28" x 28" & 28" x 28" Diptych