Artist Statement

With 'Self Portrait (Jukebox),' Alex Israel Depicts the Wonder of Musical Nostalgia

Few contemporary artists have garnered as much acclaim as Alex Israel for advancing the conceptual values of self portraiture. With the archival pigment work 'Self Portrait (Jukebox),' presented now through June 6 in “Where is My Mind?” at Pace Prints, Israel transmutes his studio jukebox into a whimsical rumination on our connection to music—framed by his signature silhouette. The work, released in an edition of 15 and mounted within a custom-designed frame, is one of ten prints within the introspective, evocative exhibition, Israel’s first with Pace Prints.

'Self Portrait (Jukebox)' courtesy of Alex Israel and Pace Prints

Bio: Alex Israel, 43, Los Angeles

Title of work: Self Portrait (Jukebox)

Where to see it:

Alex Israel: Where is My Mind?
Pace Prints, New York
Through June 6th

Three words to describe this work: Whimsical, magical, nostalgic.

What was on your mind at the time: I was looking at a vintage jukebox in my studio and imagining it coming to life. Its reality started to slip—feathered birds, swirling notes—as if Hollywood animators took over the room and the everyday tilted into fantasy.

Image by Jack Pierson

An interesting feature that’s not immediately noticeable: What’s easy to miss is that the entire image—both the photorealistic base and the animated overlays—was first hand-painted by a scenic artist on the Warner Bros. backlot. That painting was then scanned and translated into the final print.

How the work reflects your practice as a whole: I work out of my hometown, Los Angeles, so I’m always thinking about image-making—how the city produces images, and how they loop back into our sense of reality. Here, classic Hollywood animation collides with pop music and the logic of augmented reality, a space I explored through collaborations with Snap Inc. I’m drawn to that edge between the real and the performed—a boundary that feels especially fluid here in LA.

One song that captures the work’s essence: Any of the records in that jukebox would do—and they’re already in the piece! Let’s go with “Best of My Love” by The Emotions.

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