VANCOUVER, BC.- Im Douglas Coupland, a writer and artist based in Vancouver, Canada. I'm currently crowd-sourcing the planet looking for the head of Vincent Van Gogh or rather, his closest lookalike. The head that comes closest will become the source material for a large bronze sculpture commission. I'm learning that most people have someone in their life who looks like Vincent van Gogh. It could be your next door neighbour. It could be a guy at work. It could be you. Im asking people to submit photos of their suggested candidate to the website iamvincent.com
The one person who the artist thinks best resembles Vincent van Gogh, will be given 5,000 euros and will be flown with a guest to Vancouver for a unique experience. They will be 3D-scanned and their facial data will become Vincent van Goghs likeness on Couplands final 2 meter by 3 meter sculpture, forever immortalizing them in bronze and on a plaque bearing the lookalikes name.
The Vincent van Gogh bronze will be the first in an ongoing series of commissioned monumental outdoor works titled Redheads. Following Van Gogh there will be any number of redheads.
Why redheads?
Id like it to trigger discussion about new relationships between science, art and globalization, states Coupland.
Redheadedness is the most recent successful human mutation. Between one and two per cent of the worlds population is redheaded, and in north European and western countries, this number can rise to six per cent. It appears in people with two copies of a recessive allele on chromosome 16 which produces an altered version of the MC1R protein. This is a complex way of saying that there is no way of telling when a gene is going to change, and what sort of characteristic it will bring about. This genetic magic is a microcosm of the way in which all life on earth changes with time. I want this first bronze piece to be eternal but I also want it to be imbued with the twenty-first century.
On making big head sculptures
Over the past decade Douglas Coupland has been making a lot of art and public art involving large heads. His Gumhead began as an outdoor public artwork in Vancouver in the summer of 2014, a fiberglass selfportrait. It was seven-feet-tall and over four months it accumulated a quarter-million pieces of chewing gum applied by the public. After Vancouver, Gumhead went to Toronto and to Sao Paulo and Brasilia in Brazil.
How to submit a photo
Simply upload a photo to
iamvincent.com While youre on the website you can read Couplands Vincent van Gogh Blog, view the latest entries and vote for your favorite photo. Photo entries will be accepted until August 20, 2016 (midnight, Pacific Time).