Fabian Williams • Occasional Superstar
Fabian “Occasional Superstar” Williams is an Atlanta-based visual and performance artist best known for his fluorescent, symbolism-filled mural work depicting black cultural and civil rights leaders in modern and futuristic contexts. Williams is also known for his work depicting the seemingly state-sanctioned violence perpetrated against black men.
Born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, Williams studied fine art at East Carolina University. After working for 13 years in the advertising industry with a long list of clients from Nike to Warner Bros to HBO, he decided to move to a purely expressive practice, where he had the freedom to express more political and socially relevant contemporary themes.
Assessing and updating the Black Arts Movement’s racialized aesthetic, Williams’ vibrant and sometimes neon-illuminated art interrogates both the liberatory and oppressive forces at play in black American life. In his entire body of work, Williams employs a broad scope of source material from commercial illustration, classic portraiture, and hip-hop iconography, to confront issues of race and the larger public’s oft-uninterrogated consumption of black cultural icons and products. Williams’ early realist paintings were of the pick-up ball players on Venice Beach during his stint in marketing and design.
Through his formal education, Williams cultivated an interest in realism, particularly the work of the Italian painter, Caravaggio. He also is stylistically inspired by the naturalistic works of Norman Rockwell. His series Rockingwell, an homage to Rockwell, re-imagines Rockwell’s depictions of America through a racial and pop-culturally informed lens. In much of his work, Williams often idealizes the seeming ordinariness of black life and situates hip-hop icons and everyday citizens alike in sometimes idyllic and sometimes imperfect postures.
Fabian’s works have been featured at Art Basel, on CNN, Headline News, Great Big Story, in The Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Playboy Magazine, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and a host of other media outlets.