Trenton Doyle Hancock’s Universe of Weirdness

Studio 360

In artist Trenton Doyle Hancock‘s work, evil is on a vegan diet. His drawings, now on view at the Studio Museum in Harlem, feature the abstemious eaters as villains. They’re the antagonists to the meat-filled characters Hancock calls “Mounds.” But to be clear, Hancock doesn’t have anything against real-life vegans. “It’s a tough lifestyle,” he says.

Hancock’s weird universe was shaped by the science fiction he was obsessed with as a kid. “I was lucky enough to have grown up in a time when there was this explosion of really weird, sci-fi based toys,” Hancock says. “And it was always good against evil.”

Hisfictional world is colorful, abstract, and wacky — something like Hieronymus Bosch, with some Fisher Price and Marvel mixed in. But Hancock isn’t all fantasy. “On the surface, my work is like little boy art — goblins and good and evil. But I think at the heart of the work is that I don’t really know what good and evil actually are. It’s up to the viewer.”

(Originally aired December 12, 2008)

'Give Me My Flowers While I Yet Live,' Version #1, acrylic, mixed media on paper, 2010

Will you support The World?

The story you just read is not locked behind a paywall because listeners and readers like you generously support our nonprofit newsroom. Now more than ever, we need your help to support our global reporting work and power the future of The World. Can we count on you?