This is an original art piece, by the artist, that will be displayed at the USTA’s Be Open - Open Canvas Original Art Exhibit at the 2021 US Open. This exhibit features diverse and under-represented artists who have created artwork that reflects their unique experiences and will be displayed during the two weeks of the event outside of Arthur Ashe stadium, to get people talking and thinking about the issues.
“At times, I have felt like a crowd of people all at once. A body of bodies. This piece not only makes peace with the multitudes I have come to know within myself, but welcomes them.”...Chella Man
The USTA Foundation Incorporated is donating 50% of the net proceeds from the auctioning of this item to the Deaf Queer Resource Center, in honor of the artist.
Bid now on this original piece of artwork and own a piece of Be Open history from the 2021 US Open!
Artist: Chella Man
Title: Have You Met Every Layer of Yourself?
Year created: 2021
Medium: Oil and acrylic on canvas
Height (unframed, inches): 87
Width (unframed, inches): 87
Depth (unframed, inches): 1.5
Description of piece:
This piece will be on an artex canvas and when unwrapped is 7’3” x 7’3”. The canvas is stretched and wrapped over a natural wood frame. The frame sits 1.5” off the wall so of the 3” overhang, only 1.5” will be visible along the perimeter of the frame, and the remaining, outermost 1.5” will be stapled down and only visible from the back.
Artist bio:
Chella Man is an internationally acclaimed artist who identifies Deaf, Genderqueer, Trans-Masculine, Jewish and Chinese. As a multi-hyphenate, his work is not limited to one medium. Expanding into painting, film, collage, and performance art, Man explores the continuum of identity and deconstructs binaries within disability, gender, race, and morality. They are the author of Continnum (2021), the director of The Beauty of Being Deaf (2021), executive producer of Trans in Trumpland (2021), fashion designer for his collection with Opening Ceremony (2019), Jericho in Titans of DC Universe (2019), former columnist for Them, Condé Naste’s first LGBTQ+ publication (2018). Man has and continues to give talks internationally on the intersections of art, disability, queerness, race, and healing. He hopes to continue pushing the boundaries of what it means to be accessible, inclusive, and equal in this world.