David Art Wales

For other people called David Wales, see David Wales.

David Arthur Wales, a.k.a. David Wales or David Art Wales (born 6 February 1964, Sydney) is an Australian entrepreneur and artist best known for creating satirical cult figure Guru Adrian.[1] He has been involved in collaborations with artist Keith Haring and filmmaker Morgan Spurlock.[2]

Wales has been called "the father of the Noughties”[3] in relation to his role as founder of Project Naughtie, a quixotic 1999 grassroots campaign to name the decade lasting from 2000–2009 the "Naughties".[4][5] The word Naughties, often spelled Noughties, has since been adopted by much of the international press.

1980s

At the age of nineteen, Wales launched his first business, Nice Enterprises,[6] described as "the world's first mail order flattery service." A year later, he co-published Fatplastiscene magazine, the first issue of which is in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia.[7] In 1986 Wales became host of the ABC TV show Edge of the Wedge.[8]

During the 1980s he was a frequent contributor to Australian radio station Triple Jay, providing commentary on pop-cultural issues, including a live report from Berlin as the Berlin Wall fell, and a comic strip featuring Guru Adrian for the station's fanzine, Alan.[9]

1990s

Wales moved to New York to become a painter in 1989 and spent the 1990s showing at various Manhattan and Australian galleries, including Roslyn Oxley 9 and Sherman Galleries.[10][11][12] During this time he also worked on content creation projects for MTV, Fox and Disney. Several companies, including Hanna Barbera, Fox Television, and MTV, have optioned Wales's creation Guru Adrian with a view to building a television show around the character; however, each project was eventually shelved.[13]

In 1998 Wales and Australian dancer Catherine Hourihan launched the Red Vixen Burlesque,[14] a popular downtown New York attraction that is now seen as an early progenitor of the burlesque revival movement.[15]

On 18 May of the same year New York magazine carried a story about Wales's position as "official pinsetter" for the unmechanized antique bowling alley that exists beneath the Fifth Ave mansion that houses the famed Frick Collection. The article reported that Henry Clay Frick had had the underground two-lane alley constructed in 1914 for his own amusement. By 1998 the lanes were being used for the benefit of museum trustees, and Wales, in spats and Edwardian costume, had "perfected the technique of resetting the pins and then quickly ducking out of the way."[16][17]

Naughties

In 1999 Wales initiated Project Naughtie,[4] a grassroots campaign to name the 2000s decade the "Naughties"[18][19] with Geoff Seelinger and Matt Frost of Fondue Media. The campaign ran under the motto "Eighties, Nineties, Naughties."

That same year, Wales became Cultural Forecaster for Toyota,[20] tracking and predicting trends for the automaker's design division. Known for pithy social commentary, he told Details magazine (April 2001) that "Fake is the new real."[21] In 2000 he launched Ministry of Culture, a research, strategy and content creation firm.

In 2008, Wales and filmmaker Morgan Spurlock launched the website Cinelan, described by The Hollywood Reporter as a "film content publisher."[22]

More recently, Ministry of Culture has created a viral campaign claiming to resurrect an ancient Welsh temperance movement called Prudent Boozers.[23][24]

Since the 1999 launch of Project Naughtie, Naughties (or Noughties, as it is more commonly spelled) has slowly gained traction among sectors of the international press as a term for the decade lasting 2000–2009. The word is currently used by CNN.com[25] in the US, BBC.com[26] in the UK, and a host of Australian publications, including the Sydney Morning Herald.[27] A December 2009 article[3] for Murdoch news site news.com.au referred to Wales as the “father of the Noughties” in relation to his role as founder of Project Naughtie.

References

  1. The Face, Sept 1987 | Save the Wales
  2. Variety, Wed 2 February 2008 | Directors Back Distributor Cinelan
  3. 1 2 A decade for rebellion and unsung heroes
  4. 1 2 Campaign fights for decade to be named the 'naughties'
  5. Sydney Morning Herald, 29 December 1999 | Out Go Nineties, Hello Naughties?
  6. Sunday Telegraph, 13 November 1983 | It’s Nice Work – And He’s Got it
  7. UNKNOWN | Fatplastiscene editorial sheet [recto] part of Fatplastiscene issue No.1
  8. Stiletto magazine, date unknown 1986 | The Wedge
  9. Alan An Interview with David Art Wales: Designer of Triple Jay Fanzine, Alan
  10. The Weekend Review, 6 June 1992 | Skeletons for the Human Insect
  11. The Sydney Morning Herald / Good Weekend, Sept 5 1998 | A Job for the Guru
  12. The Sydney Morning Herald / Good Weekend, Sept 5 1998 | A Job for the Guru
  13. Who, 7 July 1994 | Guru Adrian Wows Hanna-Barbera
  14. The New York Times, 4 October 1998 | Burlesque’s Back, a Step Ahead of the Law
  15. Arts & Books: New York Diary: Post-modernism for perverts | Independent, The (London) | Find Articles at BNET
  16. New York magazine, 18 May 1998 | Bowling For Duhrers
  17. The Sydney Morning Herald / Good Weekend, Sept 5 1998 | A Job for the Guru
  18. Steve Silberman: Here Come 'The Naughties', Wired 30 November 1999
  19. ABC Radio, 5 January 2000 | Campaign fights for decade to be named the 'naughties' (transcript)
  20. Hunters of Cool Are in a Freeze
  21. Details, Apr 2001 | The Death of Cool
  22. Cinelan Nonfiction short films get new home
  23. Prudent Boozers: Nurse the 3rd!
  24. PSFK Interview: David Art Wales on Secret Societies | PSFK – Trends, Ideas & Inspiration
  25. How Tiger defined golf in the Noughties
  26. Gadgets of the Noughties
  27. Never so good

External links

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