Invader: The Man Behind Those Streetwise Mosaics

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Invader, foreground, prepares to launch the mosaic Space One, on a small platform facing a camera, into the stratosphere

INVADER All photos Courtesy Jonathan LeVine Gallery

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itting at a table in the Pause Café, near the Bastille, a rather average-looking Frenchman in his early 40s, dressed in jeans, a sweater and tennis shoes, spoke animatedly about his artistic career over a glass of menthe à l’eau. A great many Parisians would instantly recognize his work—one example was on the wall in the café—but no one took any notice of him. His face is unrecognizable, and for good reason: in media appearances he always wears a mask, and for years now he’s been known only by his pseudonym— Invader. “In 1996, I was a budding young artist, looking for my way and experimenting with a number of forms, and one of these different experiments was a mosaic image of a Space Invader,” he says. The 1980s video game character, depicted with simple ceramic bathroom tiles, would take on meaning for him only later, long after he cemented that first tile image to an alley wall a few blocks from the Pause Café. “I didn’t realize at first the importance of the action. It took me almost two years to realize that, in putting this Space Invader in the street,

I’d materialized the digital pixel through the mosaic. It was like a revelation. I said, here is one Space Invader—I have invaded a little piece of Parisian space, and now I should continue to invade the rest of Paris.” And he did. In 2011, an exhibition celebrated the 1,000th Invader mosaic to grace the Parisian cityscape. But Paris is only one piece of the worldwide project Invader has undertaken. His mosaics of Space Invaders— and other iconic game characters including Pac-Man and Super Mario—turn up on every habitable continent in the world. He has “invaded” the Eiffel Tower, the giant letters of the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles and the Great Wall of China. In 2000, he even invaded French President Jacques Chirac’s lapel, with a slyly placed Space Invader sticker during a random meeting at Paris’s FIAC art fair. Featured in Exit Through The Gift Shop, the 2010 film by the infamous UK street artist Banksy, Invader is considered a pioneer of the international street-art scene, his work lauded as a brilliantly low-tech critique of the information era and the saturation of modern life by digital technology. “Alias” replicas of his street mosaics, along with his

by Jeffrey T. Iverson studio works, today sell at auction houses for thousands of euros. His limited-edition Invasion guides and maps, which meticulously document his works in each city, are coveted collectables.

Interactive art

With his growing art world recognition (and his middle-aged limbs no longer quite as adept at clambering up building facades in the dark of night), no one could blame him for wanting to rest on his laurels a bit, but so far that seems unlikely. “The word vacation hasn’t existed in my vocabulary for 15 years now—vacations have become invasions,” he says. “As an artist, I really believe in the idea of throwing yourself entirely into a project, and making it your life.” Today, Invader seems determined to dip ever deeper into his creative well. In recent years he has developed “Rubikcubism”— manipulating and stacking Rubik’s Cubes to create not only 3-D Space Invaders, but also images of the Dalai Lama, the Mona Lisa and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres’s Grande Odalisque. More recently he developed the first digitally interactive street art: using QR-code technology, he uses tiles to

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Invader: The Man Behind Those Streetwise Mosaics by jeffreytiverson - Issuu