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    Faile To Succeed

    Brooklyn-based Faile bridges gap between fine art and street at Dallas Contemporary

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Sep 20, 2013 | 9:04 am

    Since 1999, the two-person, Brooklyn-based collective Faile has been brightening the boulevards of New York City with instantly recognizable imagery — a modern mash-up of advertising graphics, mass media totems and original iconography.

    This innovative high/low mix has taken them from sidewalks and building sites to international street art exhibitions (including the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art and the Tate Modern) to formal galleries to their first-ever solo museum show, opening this Saturday, September 21, at the Dallas Contemporary.

    Comprising two long-term friends, Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller, Faile is often spoken of in the same breath as Banksy and Shepard Fairey and with good reason: These self-taught painters, printers and publishers have a freshness and energy to their work that transcends the gallery walls.

    CultureMap caught up with the duo in their Brooklyn studio as they prepped for “Where Wild Won’t Break,” an exhibition of installations, paintings and site-specific works inspired by the American West.

    CultureMap: Tell us a bit about the idea behind your theme for your Contemporary show.

    Patrick Miller: It started with the idea of the West: horses, open skies and cowboys, ideas about Americana. We write a lot of stuff too; one of the lines we use is “Secede to Succeed.” It’s things to relate to Texas. One of the images is someone trying to tame an eagle — there’s an idea of trying to tame something that is inherently chaotic and has a life of its own. In a way, [the theme] relates to our work, working in the streets and working in the studio and trying to embrace and incorporate this chaos into the larger structure of the way we work.

    CM: How did you two meet and start collaborating?

    Miller: We met the first day of high of school when we were 14 in Scottsdale, Arizona. We always had art classes together and, along with being really close friends, we also had really similar styles and appreciated the same type of art work; we were always trading sketchbooks inspired by comic books and baseball cards. Through college it was along the same lines, and there was a point we started talking about doing silkscreen collaborations, and that was the basis for Faile.

    CM: You were originally called A Life. How did the name change?

    Patrick McNeil: I moved down to the Lower East Side in ’99, and we’d already printed our first run of what was going to be A Life. I moved in with a new roommate who said, “There’s a shoe store called Alife you might want to look at.”

    When I walked in, it was the first retail shop/art gallery that was all geared to street art. I talked to the manager at the time, and he had seen our stuff and thought it was Shepard [Fairey] playing a joke. He said, “I don’t want to tell you what to do, but we have more PR and recognition than you do, so before you go bonkers, you may want to rethink your name.”

    We went home and started playing with anagrams, and Faile came out of it. There’s something to “Faile to Succeed,” look past your failures and you’ll find your life. We thought it was powerful and resonated and ended up cutting A Life out of all the posters.

    CM: You’ve gone from stencils to posters to stickers to canvas. How did your process evolve over the years?

    McNeil: As we traveled, we’d go on these long tours and bring a lot of paper, and eventually we’d run out. We’d end up cutting stencils so we can keep things going, and it became a mobile kind of print shop. If we did a pop-up, we’d find windowpanes and scrap wood, and we’d stencil and paint on them.

    Eventually on the street, a poster would get ripped, and you’d come over the top with a stencil, and there would be this level of layers or rebuilding that ended up coming through in the work. The idea on the street is a work would have a life and deteriorate, and that was the beauty of it. In the studio, we’d play with what we’d learned on the street.

    CM: How do you divide duties when you are working on a show?

    McNeil: It’s kind of the same as it was in the beginning. We come up with imagery, which can happen organically, but these days it’s a bit more structured. We’ll go somewhere like the ballet, take a theme and wrap our heads around it. We both crush it together from there.

    The images get thrown into the mix, and from there it can get made into sculpture, applied to prints or stencils. Then they get ripped and broken down and juxtaposed. We’ll have times we’ll sit down and say, “What’s this show about?” We work best with a theme to take in, embrace and tackle.

    CM: Is there a vast difference between creating art for the street and art for an established gallery or museum?

    McNeil: In the beginning, when we used to work a lot more on the street, the street informed the art happening in the studio — the way surfaces broke down, and rips and destruction and staining, they showed up in the work a lot more. As we’ve slowing been working more in the studio, it’s turned around where the studio is informing the work we do on the street.

    Miller: We’re still really inspired by the street, still doing things like photographing a bodega window filled with imagery and type. We never set out to be street artists; when we started it didn’t have that label, it was just people doing interesting things in a direct way. It’s always really important to have the studio side and the street side. It’s very symbiotic.

    ---

    Faile’s “Where Wild Won’t Break” runs September 21-December 22 at the Dallas Contemporary.

    The Dallas Contemporary hosts Faile's first solo show, "Where Wild Won't Break," opening September 21.

    Detail of Faile for Dallas Contemporary
    Photo courtesy of Dallas Contemporary
    The Dallas Contemporary hosts Faile's first solo show, "Where Wild Won't Break," opening September 21.
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    Piano competition news

    Cliburn piano competition locks in 20-year commitment to Dallas and SMU

    Stephanie Allmon Merry
    Mar 5, 2026 | 10:00 am
    Shuan Hern Lee at 2019 Cliburn International Junior Piano Competition and Festival
    Photo by Ralph Lauer
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    The Fort Worth-based Cliburn is crossing county lines and making a long-term commitment to Dallas: The arts organization is entering a 20-year partnership with Southern Methodist University and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra for the next five editions of its Cliburn International Competition for Young Pianists.

    The next one will be contested June 10-19, 2027, in Dallas.

    Formerly the Cliburn International Junior Piano Competition and Festival, the contest welcomes top pianists aged 13 to 17 from around the world for both fierce competition and educational enrichment. The Dallas partnership will include an in-residence fellowship program on the campus of SMU consisting of masterclasses, workshops, artist conversations, performance opportunities, and other scheduled activities, a release says.

    “As the Cliburn continues to encourage the futures of the amazing young artists who participate in the Cliburn International Competition for Young Pianists, we must also invest in the future of the communities that make events like this possible,” says Cliburn president and CEO Jacques Marquis in the release. “By cementing the partnership with SMU and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra - true pillars of the Dallas artistic community - for the next 20 years, we are telling the people of Dallas that the Cliburn is here, and that we are committed to the development of the next generation of great artists.”

    'Cliburn Junior' history
    The inaugural Cliburn International Junior Piano Competition and Festival was held in June 2015 at Texas Christian University, with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra accompanying the finalists. The top three finishers in 2015 were from Kazakhstan, Russia, and China.

    Cliburn Junior Competition winners Cliburn Junior 2023 winner Seokyoung Hong (center) with second-place Yifan Wu (left), and third-place Jan Schulmeister. Photo by Ralph Lauer

    The competition for teens moved to Dallas and partnered with SMU and the DSO for the 2019 edition, attracting a new audience of piano enthusiasts on the east side of the Metroplex. (The Cliburn-experts at CultureMap Fort Worth published a guide to getting the most out of the competition in Dallas.)

    The move to Dallas marked the first time the organization, a crown jewel of Fort Worth culture, staged a major program outside namesake Van Cliburn’s adopted hometown since Cliburn competitions began in 1962.

    At the time, Marquis explained that, "One key to continuing the Cliburn’s strategic advancement is to continuously reach a broader community, both around the world and in our own backyard."

    The junior competition was held in Dallas again in 2023; Seokyoung Hong, a 15-year-old phenom from South Korea, took home the top prize.

    A few "Cliburn Junior" laureates have gone on to compete in the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition; notably, Tony Yike Yang, a Canadian pianist who competed in both the 2015 Cliburn junior and the 2017 Cliburn International, where he earned a spot in the semifinals. And Clayton Stephenson, who competed in the 2015 Cliburn Junior and returned for the 2022 Cliburn International, where he was a fan-favorite finalist (and brought the house down in Bass Hall with a performance of the Gershwin Piano Concerto.)

    Clayton Stephenson, 23, of the United States Clayton Stephenson competed in the 2015 Cliburn Junior Competition and returned for the 2022 Cliburn International Competition, where he was a finalist. Photo courtesy of The Cliburn

    The Cliburn also just announced its further stretch, to Houston, where the inaugural Cliburn International Competition for Conductors will take place in June 2028.

    Looking ahead to 2027
    For the 2027 young pianists' competition, per tradition, the Preliminary and Semifinal Rounds will be hosted on the campus of SMU, where participants will also reside throughout their time in Dallas.

    The Final Round will move to the Meyerson Symphony Center, where six young pianists will perform one concerto movement with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Maurice Cohn, music director of the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra and former assistant conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.

    The 2027 competition jury will be chaired by Sa Chen, the 2005 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition bronze medalist. Additional jurors will include:

    • Kenny Broberg, USA (2017 Cliburn silver medalist)
    • Lucille Chung, Canada/USA
    • Alessandro Deljavan, Italy (2009 & 2013 Cliburn jury prize winner who returns to DFW frequently for concerts)
    • Marie-Josèphe Jude, France
    • Alexander Korsantia, Georgia/USA
    • Alessandro Mazzamuto, Italy
    • Noriko Ogawa, Japan
    • Steven Osborne, Scotland

    Alessandro Deljavan Italian pianist and Cliburn alum Alessandro Deljavan will serve on the jury. Photo courtesy of Chamber Music Society of Fort Worth

    Pianists aged 13 to 17 are invited to apply by November 17, 2026. The Cliburn will invite 38 artists to participate as Piano Fellows; from this group, 24 pianists will be selected to compete for prizes. All applicants must have been born on or after June 7, 2010, and before June 19, 2014.

    More information can be found at the competition's website.

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