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Maxim takes his art to Miart Gallery London for Frieze Week with ‘Infinite Drama’

LONDON, UK — Musician and mixed media artist Maxim has announced a solo exhibition at Miart Gallery London. Fresh from a sell-out UK tour, Maxim, The Prodigy front man and talented fine artist, is mounting a retrospective of his art. The exhibition titled Infinite Drama will run from October 13 to November 07 during Frieze Week in London, and will take over two floors of Miart Gallery London which was formerly a bank in Mayfair.

Left to right: ‘Balaclava Ballerina’, Maxim, ‘Superhero Rebel’

As well as being known as a member of the award-winning band The Prodigy, Maxim is known for his haunting, mixed-media artworks that explore the darker corners of human nature. The exhibition is titled Infinite Drama, an appropriate description for the dramatic and powerful artworks, which draw on elements of the human psyche and dramatic world events such as troubling social issues, police brutality, and war.

Maxim’s artworks all possess an element of drama combined with a hint of Pop Art – which is fitting for a member of a game-changing rock band who emerged on the dance music scene in the 1990s before becoming part of popular culture. Especially as he is known for his high-energy performances and explosive stage presence. The performing side of Maxim’s creativity has translated into his work, as a multidisciplinary artist whose musical product sometimes informs, yet is entirely separate from, his visual.

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Maxim’s Infinite Drama solo exhibition will feature paintings and sculptures fusing influences of Afrofuturism and abstraction with hints of Pop Art and Surrealism. The result is a powerful body of work that comments on the darker side of humanity. The anti-police brutality riots in the US sowed the seed for Maxim’s sculpture Balaclava Ballerina, which is featured in the exhibition.

Maxim also looks to nature and the inner workings of the human mind as influences for his art, with a series of exquisite paintings (Therapy Green, Therapy Gold, and Therapy Yellow) inspired by the Rorschach Test, a process where ink blot drawings of psychoanalysis subjects are psychologically analyzed. The butterfly is a recurring motif in Maxim’s artistic oeuvre, while the Miart London exhibition will also feature more tongue-in-cheek works such as Rebel with the Paw, sculptures of gun-toting felines on their hind legs, a surreal metaphor for society’s rebels who spread positivity by shooting rays of love.

Central to the exhibition are Maxim’s Afrofuturist sculptures inspired by ancient African masks, painted in bright colors with high-gloss reflective paint to lend them a futuristic edge. The elongated, oval faces of Maxim’s sculptures bring to mind Modigliani’s early 20th Century portraits inspired by primitivist art mixed with cubism, or Picasso’s iconic Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907), which both appropriated ancient African art and sculpture for Western art.

However, Maxim’s sculptures Green Future X, Silver Future X and Black Future X, are actually associated with the Afrofuturist philosophy of a cultural aesthetic fusing science-fiction, history, and fantasy, to explore the African experience and connect those from the black diaspora with their forgotten African ancestry. The term Afrofuturism is rooted in African American science fiction such as the writings of Octavia Butler and Samuel R. Delany, and the music of jazz musician Sun Ra, who created a mythical persona that combined Egyptian mysticism with Science Fiction.

Maxim’s Afrofuturist masks capture a zeitgeist embodied by the Ekow Eshun-curated Hayward Gallery exhibition “In The Black Fantastic,” and his influences can be linked to some of the artists featured there, such as Wangechi Mutu and Chris Ofili. Maxim’s interest in Afrofuturism is part of a legacy of artists and musicians with links to the philosophy, including George Clinton and film director Wanuri Kahiu.

Infinite Drama will feature Balaclava Ballerina, a mixed media painting and sculpture, which Maxim describes as “A Super-Heroine in a Balaclava. She carries two guns that spray rose petals over negative people which spreads positive vibes and love”. Maxim was moved to create the image after seeing a photograph in the media during the riots following the murder by a US policeman of George Floyd. He saw a female facing a group of police in riot gear and she looked so innocent and was no threat compared to the strength of the 30-40 riot police with shields and weapons that she was up against. This led to Balaclava Ballerina.

Maxim’s Balaclava Ballerina and Rebel Cat characters address the subject of standing up against something negative and spreading love and positivity in the face of social inequality. This ethos of promoting love and equality is also reflected in some of Maxim’s other artwork, which carries a strong sense of the toxic injustice that continues to permeate society. For example, many of his works include the “$” symbol, which is pointing out the good and bad side of money. Maxim finds the phrase “Money is the Root of all Evil” quite ridiculous – “It depends on how you use it. Of course, greed and selfishness can cause corruption and destruction. But so many good things can come from having money. People can be fed, clothed, and opportunities created for the less fortunate.” Maxim’s artwork also reflects the fantasy world we all like to be a part of, which we see as escapism from the real world and is more playful.

Maxim has more recently become known for his creativity as a contemporary artist under the pseudonym of MM (Double M). He has been creating paintings, multi-media collages, and sculptures for the last 20 years; his art has been featured on various home goods, such as bone China, and soon-to-be on candles, cushions, and wallpaper. He started to explore the visual arts after a trip to an art fair where he went looking for paintings for his house. Not impressed with what he saw, he thought he could do just as well, if not better, himself. He began by painting color washes, creating abstract pieces that caught the eye of anyone that came to his house, who commissioned similar ones for themselves.

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