NEW ARRIVALS - HORACE PANTER ART

We're both proud and excited to announce a new collection at Modern Rocks Gallery from British artist, Horace Panter, also known as Sir Horace Gentleman, bass player in the British ska 2-Tone band, The Specials.

Although most of his career has been defined by music, Horace graduated in 1975 with a degree in Fine Art from Coventry University. It was there where he met Jerry Dammers, and the concept of the ska/punk band, The Specials, was born. Horace's artistic influences are diverse and range from the Pop Art paraphernalia of artists such as Peter Blake, Andy Warhol and Robert Indiana, to the depictions of light in paintings by Edward Hopper and David Hockney.

Click on the image below to view and buy signed limited edition prints from this amazing collection which includes an amazing pop art portrait of Amy Winehouse that was commissioned by The Amy Winehouse Foundation.

His giant cassette paintings show the humble cassette tape as an icon in terms of its place in both musical and cultural history. Each one represents a band or a song that has stood the test of time and become a classic in the pop genre and the recording studio in which it was produced. Many of those studios no longer exist, so each cassette is meticulously researched to look true to the original studio tapes.

These vibrant prints have been exhibited in the UK, New York and LA, and now can be purchased from Modern Rocks Gallery as signed, limited edition prints.

Steven WalkerHorace Panter, 1-30
The photography of Art Kane

We're proud to announce a new collection from the lens of celebrated photographer Art Kane.

Art Kane was quite simply a brilliant visionary whose legacy and legend live on today, and whose work remains unmatched. Kane made the legendary Harlem 1958 Jazz portrait, and his music archives include Louis Armstrong, The Who, The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, The Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Country Joe and the Fish, Frank Zappa, Cream, Eric Clapton, Sonny and Cher, Janis Joplin, and Aretha Franklin. He was the photographers’ photographer, an inspirational practitioner whose approach to portraiture is best summed up when he said “Performance shots are a waste of time, they look like everyone else’s. If you want to shoot a performer, then grab them, own them, you have to own people, then twist them into what you want to say about them.”

Kane died in 1995, but his legacy lives on through his amazing work. His son Jonathan curates his archive and releases small limited editions of these beautiful photographs. Each one is fully authenticated by his son, Jonathan Kane on behalf of the Art Kane estate.

Steven WalkerArt Kane, 1-30