Artist Talk: Tony Rave on “Blue Lives Matter”

Join Tony Rave for an Artist Talk on his solo exhibition, “Blue Lives Matter,” on Sunday, February 22 at 2PM.

Presented during Black History Month, this exhibition speaks to history not as something distant, but as something still living in bodies, neighborhoods, and memory. It honors the full complexity of Black experience—resilience, critique, humor, grief, survival, imagination, and truth-telling. Neither purely celebratory nor purely tragic, Blue Lives Matter is layered, evolving, and alive, opening space for interpretation, disagreement, reflection, and discovery. Tony Rave’s work does not complete the viewer’s thought; it ignites it.

Installation view
Tony Rave approaches both series with deep personal urgency rooted in lived observation. Growing up in Detroit, he witnessed how policy becomes personal and how slogans, symbols, and public messaging quietly embed themselves into private lives. His work does not chase shock value or reenact trauma; it insists on honesty.
Each piece invites the viewer to slow down, sit with the imagery, and confront it through the lens of their own experience. Many of the works in this exhibition are still in progress, making the show a snapshot of an evolving practice rather than a fixed or resolved statement.
By drawing on familiar characters and visual language, his work questions how innocence and authority become intertwined, and how imagery influences belief, belonging, and control. The connection between the two series is emotional and human rather than literal—together tracing a line between policy and culture, language and imagery, public narrative and inner life.

This exhibition brings together two interconnected bodies of work—the Reagan Series and the Smurks Series—that examine how systems of power shape lives long before consent is ever possible. Both bodies of work share the same emotional terrain: one reflects on the era defined by the war on drugs and its lasting impact on Black families and futures; while the other engages the cultural symbolism of policing through the Blue Lives Matter narrative. His provocative work asks viewers to feel, remember, recognize, and arrive at their own conclusions, instead of instructing viewers what to think.

Screenshot

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Tony Rave is a Detroit-based multirevolutionary artist whose work confronts the intersections of race, power, memory, and American visual culture. Working across painting, sculpture, and installation, Rave uses satire and familiar iconography to examine how systems of authority are normalized, marketed, and absorbed into everyday life.

Drawing from pop imagery, corporate branding, political symbols, and childhood cartoons, Rave transforms the familiar into a site of critique. His work invites viewers in through recognition, then unsettles them by exposing the deeper histories and structures beneath the surface.

Rooted in lived experience and shaped by growing up in Detroit, Rave’s practice reflects how policy becomes personal and how slogans, symbols, and public narratives quietly shape private lives. His work prioritizes honesty over palatability, positioning art as a mirror to the present moment and a record of patterns that continue to repeat.

 

Date

Feb 22 2026
Expired!

Time

2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Location

PLAYGROUND DETROIT
2845 Gratiot Avenue, Detroit, MI 48207