Daniel Arango

[2] Arango’s latest collection documents two months spent wandering through the Metropolitan Museum of Art in search for inspiration, the culmination of a three-year journey around the world, after which he returned to New York.

Daniel's previous work fits into the overarching project he calls the "Holy K movement" (a satirical play on the Kellogg’s brand cereal).

[3][4][5] Twelve Apostles is a large-scale drawing made with inkjet on canvas to create a complexly layered scene, juxtaposing modern images against not only historical and contemporary building facades, but the medium of tapestries as well.

[2] Airport Security Checkpoint employs Persian motifs to explore the initiation process by which he names "Followers" (art collaborators).

The book itself was intended to "remind us that public sex is not exclusively about a personal pursuit of pleasure" and in fact contain the "seeds of historical social and political action".

"Twelve Apostles"
"Airport Security Checkpoint"