Education
Jesse graduated from Snohomish High School, after which he spent one year studying the art of the Old Masters in Seattle"s public libraries.
Jesse graduated from Snohomish High School, after which he spent one year studying the art of the Old Masters in Seattle"s public libraries.
He works and lives in Seattle and New York City. Jesse"s beginnings in art started with graffiti, which he began practicing as a youth growing up in Snohomish, Washington. He has since traveled from Seattle to the East Coast and Spain, leaving his mark along the way. Edwards, who likes to refer to his graffiti as installation art, tends toward figurative representations of celebrities, friends, and self-portraits.
“I like pictures,” says Edwards, “you don"t have to be graffiti-literate to read pictures.
In separate works, dead celebrities Anna Nicole Smith and rapper Tupac Shakur are depicted with children in tender embraces, evoking something like a streetwise Mary Cassatt. When asked how his work is perceived by other graffiti artists, Edwards boasts, “They love lieutenant
They flip.”
In 1999, he was accepted into Cornish College of the Arts on a Nellie Scholarship. Cornish later threw him out of school for verbally abusing a professor
About being kicked out of Cornish, Edwards said, “I knew they wouldn"t like what I had to say, but I figured I would go out with a bang.”
Edwards went on to study at the Gage Academy (then called the Seattle Academy of Realist Art), where he was offered a second chance in the form of another scholarship.
Edwards stayed for four years. Edwards" outwardly thuggish persona and high-profile antics are well-known attributes of his public image. In 2009, Edwards was considered for the BRAVO reality art television show, Work of Art: The Next Great Artist.
His stylistic landscapes show influence from the Impressionist painters, especially Claude Monet.
Edwards" figurative work typically uses juxtaposition between style and subject matter and has been criticized for featuring pornography, illicit paraphernalia, and other controversial subjects. He has cited contemporary painter John Currin as a major influence, whose work features similarly inflammatory themes.
Krafft has been recognized internationally for his series of "Disasterware" which manipulates aesthetic qualities of 16th century Dutch Delftware (or Delft pottery) while using themes that reflect modern realities. lieutenant was Krafft who introduced Edwards to ceramics, instructing him through months of private study.
Jesse’s ceramic art has since earned him gallery representation, critical acclaim, and attention from the New York Times, among others
Edwards is a distinguished member of the Mystic Sons of Morris Graves.