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Jake Longstreth

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John Pullman "Jake" Longstreth Jr. (born February 3, 1977) is an American painter, musician, and radio personality. He is currently the co-host of the Apple Music 1 show, Time Crisis with Ezra Koenig and member of a Grateful Dead cover band, Richard Pictures, as well as his own musical outfit, Mountain Brews.

Key Information

Education

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Career

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He is a 2008 recipient of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant.[1] His paintings can be found in the collections at the Crocker Art Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art Library, and JP Morgan Chase, among others.[2]

Longstreth tends to portray architecture in flat, geometric forms, recalling influences such as Robert Bechtle and David Hockney, finding a place between “documentary” realism and symbolic metaphor, whereas his landscapes are portrayed as more of an improvised realism.[3][4][5]

He makes regular appearances as a co-host and former "West Coast correspondent" on Time Crisis, the Apple Music internet radio show hosted by Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig, where he frequently gives in-depth investigative reports on various topics such as the history of the Frito-Lay corporation, PepsiCo, and the National Rifle Association of America (NRA).[6] Longstreth is also a guitarist in the Grateful Dead cover band, Richard Pictures. In 2016, he made several appearances with Vampire Weekend and Dirty Projectors as a supporting musician during their performances for Bernie Sanders' campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.[7][8] Richard Pictures continued to perform with Vampire Weekend at various live shows such as the 2018 Ojai performance,[9] and opened for the band at several venues for their 2019 Father of the Bride tour.[10] In June 2019, Longstreth released an EP with rock group Mountain Brews,[11] and in January 2020 the group released their second EP, Let It Grow.[12] On Wednesday, October 9, 2019, during their two-night concert series at Red Rocks, Vampire Weekend covered Longstreth's "Mountain Brews," the title track from the EP of the same name.[13] Longstreth's third EP with Mountain Brews, Raised in a Place, released on November 7.[14]

Personal life

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Longstreth is the older brother of David Longstreth, the lead singer and guitarist of Dirty Projectors.[15][16] He married filmmaker Hannah Fidell on September 23, 2017, in Inverness, California.[17]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jake Longstreth (born 1977) is an American painter, musician, and radio personality based in Los Angeles, California.[1][2] Best known for his large-scale oil paintings depicting architectural structures, suburban sprawl, strip malls, and natural landscapes—particularly those emblematic of Southern California—he explores the interplay between built environments and their surroundings in works often executed on muslin or canvas in custom frames.[3][4][5] Longstreth holds a BFA from Lewis & Clark College (1999), where he studied art alongside economics and international affairs, and an MFA from California College of the Arts (2005); his career has been marked by solo exhibitions at galleries including Nino Mier in Los Angeles and Galerie Max Hetzler in London and Paris, with recent shows focusing on California-specific motifs such as Griffith Park vistas.[1][6][7] As a musician, he has released recordings documented in discographies and contributed to music journalism, including an oral history of Guided by Voices' Alien Lanes.[8] Since 2015, he has co-hosted the bi-weekly Time Crisis radio show on Apple Music alongside Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend, featuring discussions on music, culture, and guest appearances by figures like Jonah Hill and Alana Haim.[9][10]

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

John Pullman Longstreth Jr., known as Jake, was born in 1977 in Sharon, Connecticut, and raised in nearby Southbury, a suburb characterized by its traditional New England landscape and community structure.[6][2] His parents were John Longstreth and Carolyn Longstreth; the latter worked as an assistant district attorney for the state of Connecticut.[11] Longstreth has a younger brother, David Longstreth, a musician who performs as the frontman of the band Dirty Projectors and has described their family upbringing in Southbury as supportive.[11][12] Little public information exists on additional family dynamics or early childhood experiences beyond this suburban setting, which Longstreth himself has recalled for its authentic regional ambience prior to later suburban developments.[6]

Academic Training

Jake Longstreth earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) from Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon, in 1999.[1][3] At the institution, he pursued studies in art alongside economics and international affairs.[6] Following his undergraduate degree, Longstreth obtained a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) from California College of the Arts in San Francisco, California, in 2005.[1][2][9] This graduate program focused on fine arts, aligning with his developing practice in painting.[13] No further formal academic degrees are documented in available records.[1]

Artistic Career

Early Development and Influences

Longstreth's early artistic development occurred primarily after earning his MFA from California College of the Arts in 2005, with his initial body of professional work focusing on hyper-realistic depictions of suburban landscapes. These paintings featured everyday American scenes such as vacant tennis courts, construction sites, and commercial structures like Pizza Huts, reflecting the transformation of his childhood town in Southbury, Connecticut—from a rural New England setting in the 1970s to suburban sprawl by the 1980s and 1990s.[14][6] His first solo exhibition, held at Gregory Lind Gallery in San Francisco in December 2006, showcased this style, which relied on photographic references to render flat, geometric architectural forms with meticulous precision.[6] A primary influence on these early works was Edward Hopper, whose portrayals of isolated, stark American interiors and exteriors informed Longstreth's evocation of solitude amid suburban banality.[14] Critics and observers have also drawn parallels to photorealists like Robert Bechtle, noting similarities in the deadpan rendering of mundane built environments, as well as to David Hockney for the geometric treatment of architecture.[15] Longstreth's approach positioned his paintings between hyperrealism and a subtle abstraction, prioritizing the cultural implications of consumer-driven landscapes over narrative drama.[16] This foundational phase, rooted in Longstreth's East Coast upbringing and refined through West Coast training, emphasized observation of environmental change—such as urban expansion and its isolating effects—before evolving toward broader landscapes influenced by his relocation to Los Angeles around 2012.[14] The shift marked a departure from strictly photo-based suburban vignettes to more interpretive natural scenes, though early influences like Hopper persisted in maintaining a sense of atmospheric detachment.[14]

Painting Style and Themes

Longstreth's paintings employ a realist style marked by meticulous rendering of light and atmosphere, particularly the intense effects of the California sun, which infuses his scenes with a palpable glow and gradation from vibrant blues in the sky to muted earth tones below.[9][17] He contrasts expansive, seamless skies—achieved through creamy, blended tones—with more detailed terrestrial elements like trees and structures, creating a sense of depth and environmental specificity.[18] This approach combines graphic precision in architectural forms, often rendered flat and geometric, with a landscape tradition's attentiveness to natural transitions, resulting in large-scale works that evoke both clarity and stylized abstraction.[2][16] Thematically, Longstreth focuses on the American landscape, particularly California's "in-between" spaces—suburban edges, rural expanses, and man-made intrusions into nature—depicting them devoid of human figures to emphasize quiet isolation and transformation over time.[19][3] His subjects include ubiquitous strip malls, drive-thru pharmacies, fast-food outlets with red roofs, tennis courts, and wildfire-scarred hills, presented with wry humor and an affectionate yet candid assessment of built environments' beauty and flaws.[14][15][20] These scenes highlight tensions between natural flora under cerulean skies and encroaching development, as seen in series documenting Southern California's architectural and environmental shifts, such as empty lots and hazy horizons.[21][22] Influenced by his Los Angeles residence and travels across the American West, Longstreth's oeuvre draws from photorealist precedents like Robert Bechtle while prioritizing atmospheric effects over strict verisimilitude, often evoking memory-filtered views of denuded, post-industrial terrains.[23][16][18] This results in paintings that appraise modernity's footprint—suburban sprawl amid vast openness—without overt narrative, allowing viewers to confront the stark interplay of progress and desolation in contemporary America.[2][24]

Major Exhibitions and Achievements

Longstreth received the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 2008 to support his painting practice.[1] In 2007, he participated as an artist in residence at the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts in Nebraska City, Nebraska, where he developed aspects of his landscape-oriented work.[1] His paintings are held in institutional collections including the Whitney Museum of American Art Library in New York, the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, and corporate holdings such as those of Chase Manhattan Bank and Fidelity Investments.[1] Longstreth's solo exhibitions have primarily featured his depictions of American suburban, rural, and natural landscapes, often executed in oil on canvas or muslin. Key presentations include California Landscapes (2025) at Galerie Max Hetzler in London, showcasing new oil paintings and works on paper of Southern California vistas from 2024–2025; American Heat (2024) at Galerie Max Hetzler in Berlin, focusing on man-made and natural scenes with precise clarity; and Springtime in Southern California (2022) at Nino Mier Gallery in Brussels.[3] Earlier notable solos encompass Seasonal Concepts (2021) and Spring Wind (2020) at Nino Mier Gallery in Los Angeles, Brick & Mortar I Seven Trees (2019) at Nino Mier Gallery in Los Angeles, and Pastures and Parking Lots: Outtakes and Rarities, 2003–2016 (2017) at the Crisp Ellert Museum, Flagler College, in St. Augustine, Florida, which surveyed over a decade of his output.[1] [3] Prior to these, Longstreth exhibited at Gregory Lind Gallery in San Francisco with shows such as Free Range (2015), Pastures (2011), All it is (2008), and Wabi Ranch (2006), alongside Particulate Matter (2013) and Free Range (2015) at Monya Rowe Gallery in New York.[1] These exhibitions established his reputation for large-scale, observational paintings of altered environments, progressing from early Bay Area venues to international galleries.[3]

Other Professional Activities

Musical Pursuits

Longstreth has engaged in music as a secondary pursuit to his painting career, describing his involvement as "hobby rock" and identifying as a semi-professional musician who dedicates limited time to it beyond his full-time artistic work.[9] He fronts the Los Angeles-based rock band Mountain Brews, formed in 2019, where he contributes vocals and guitar; the group draws from classic rock and indie influences, achieving approximately 30,000 monthly listeners on Spotify by late 2020.[9][25] Mountain Brews released its self-titled debut EP in June 2019, followed by a second EP, Let It Grow, in January 2020, and a third, Raised in a Place, in early November of an unspecified year shortly thereafter; tracks like "Mountain Brews" and "The Worst Margarita of My Life" exemplify the band's casual, narrative-driven style.[26][9] The band shares members with Longstreth's earlier project, Richard Pictures (also known as Dick Pics), a Grateful Dead cover band active in Los Angeles since at least 2017, in which he plays guitar and has performed at venues like Zebulon.[27][9] These efforts remain localized and non-commercial, with live shows including occasional collaborations, such as a 2024 performance of a Mountain Brews song with Vampire Weekend.[28]

Radio Hosting and Podcasting

Jake Longstreth co-hosts the internet radio show Time Crisis with Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend, which debuted in 2015 on Apple Music's Beats 1 (now Apple Music 1).[9] The program airs bi-weekly on Saturdays, blending music curation with extended conversations on topics spanning 1970s cultural aesthetics, corporate food histories, and personal anecdotes.[29] [30] Episodes typically feature the hosts selecting tracks from their personal collections, interspersed with listener call-ins, guest appearances, and thematic deep dives into artists or cultural phenomena, such as Phish performances or Billy Joel's solo work.[31] Longstreth contributes as a regular voice alongside Koenig and producer Nick Weidenfeld, often drawing on his interests in rock music history and Americana.[32] By late 2023, the show had produced over 200 episodes, maintaining a format that prioritizes unscripted dialogue over structured segments.[33] The show's podcast adaptation, available on platforms like Apple Podcasts, has garnered a dedicated following for its eclectic mix of highbrow analysis and casual tangents, with Longstreth's background as a painter and musician informing discussions on visual art, Grateful Dead lore, and indie rock scenes.[31] No other primary radio hosting roles are documented for Longstreth beyond Time Crisis.[34]

Writing and Journalism

Longstreth has contributed occasional pieces on music and art to online publications, though he has described himself as neither a professional music industry figure nor a journalist.[9] In October 2013, he published the essay "Particulate Matter" in Guernica magazine, exploring artwork as a medium for environmental criticism, drawing parallels between visual representations of pollution and broader ecological concerns.[35] Longstreth authored an oral history of Guided by Voices' 1995 album Alien Lanes for Uproxx in 2020, compiling interviews with band members and associates to detail the recording process, creative influences, and lasting impact on indie rock.[36] The piece highlights the album's lo-fi production and cult status, featuring reflections from Robert Pollard and others involved.[36] He has also written about contemporary bands, including an article on Lord Huron's enduring appeal and the popularity of their song "The Night We Met," published in a music outlet amid discussions of the band's underrecognized commercial success.

Reception and Critical Analysis

Positive Assessments and Acclaim

Longstreth's paintings have been acquired for the permanent collections of prestigious institutions, including the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Crocker Art Museum.[15][16] In 2008, he received the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, recognizing his contributions to contemporary painting.[3][1] Critics have praised Longstreth's ability to transform mundane suburban and natural scenes into evocative, timeless compositions. At the 2022 Armory Show, two New York Times critics selected Nino Mier Gallery's booth featuring his "Los Angeles Pines" series—comprising screen prints, oil paintings, and works on paper—as one of 13 favorites, noting how the works "bring a sense of sunlight and air" through depictions of tree trunks against tennis courts and parking lots, rendered in "mute colors and a flat style" reminiscent of Chris Ware that yield "uncanny windows" on everyday landscapes.[37] A 2009 Daily Serving review highlighted the "subtle uniqueness" of his manufactured suburban scenes, commending how flat color blocks and geometrical lines enhance their inherent simplicity and loneliness, while stylistic dichotomies between natural and built elements— as in Small Town In-Ground—effectively underscore environmental tensions, with careful detailing in works like Rome adding depth to stucco facades and architectural decay.[38] Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend has described Longstreth as "an incredible painter; a true student of light, texture, color," deeming him "the purest artist (in any medium)" he knows.[9] Gallerist Margaret Zuckerman of Nino Mier Gallery has compared his realist depictions of 1990s-era architecture and California landscapes to Ed Ruscha's, praising their "deadpan humor" and critical eye toward consumerism as a "tongue-in-cheek jab at American culture."[9]

Criticisms and Debates

Some observers interpret Longstreth's landscapes, which often juxtapose encroaching nature with commercial architecture like strip malls and fast-food outlets, as veiled critiques of suburban sprawl, consumerism, and environmental neglect. For example, a 2021 exhibition press release noted that a "cynical eye may see an acerbic critique of vulgar corporate landscaping," while a 2020 analysis by critic Zuckerman argued that Longstreth uses humor to undergird such commentary on consumerist excess.[39][40] However, Longstreth has explicitly rejected this framing, stating in a 2025 interview that his paintings of California landscapes incorporating manufactured elements "are not intended as critiques on environmental degradation or overdevelopment," positioning them instead as direct, non-judgmental renderings of reality.[41] This artist-viewer divergence has fueled debates on representational painting's efficacy in conveying critique without overt messaging, with Longstreth himself describing the medium's "inherent conservatism" relative to broader cultural forms during a discussion on painting's societal role.[42] A 2008 review similarly characterized early works as "less a critique than as a report," emphasizing their documentary quality over polemical intent, which underscores ongoing discourse about whether Longstreth's flat geometric forms and bold color blocks provoke reflection on modern banality or merely aestheticize it.[43] Professional critiques have generally avoided harsh condemnation, though informal discussions occasionally highlight the style's familiarity to photorealist traditions, potentially limiting its novelty in capturing ambivalence toward liminal American sites.[44] No significant controversies surround his musical or broadcasting endeavors, such as the Time Crisis podcast co-hosted with Ezra Koenig since 2015.

Personal Life and Views

Residences and Lifestyle

Longstreth was born in 1977 in Amenia, New York, and grew up in Southbury, Connecticut, a suburb that underwent significant transformation from traditional New England character to more standardized development during his youth.[6] After completing his BFA in Portland, Oregon, in 1999, he relocated to San Francisco in 2003 for graduate studies, residing in the Bay Area—including Oakland—through at least 2008 while developing his early painting practice.[6][45] He later moved to New York, where he produced initial iterations of his architectural paintings, before shifting to Los Angeles around 2012 to establish his studio and professional base.[23][14] Since approximately 2012, Longstreth has lived and worked in Los Angeles, California, a location that aligns with his focus on depicting contemporary American suburban and commercial landscapes.[1][2] In 2022, he and his wife, filmmaker Hannah Fidell—whom he married on September 23, 2017—purchased a ranch-style house in the city, featuring a serene courtyard suited to family life.[46][47] The couple, who share a three-year-old daughter as of 2024, renovated an attached semi-finished garage into a multifunctional family space with cork flooring and walls, plywood accents, built-in planters, and custom furnishings, transforming it into a cozy, cabin-like retreat for creative work, relaxation, and social gatherings such as karaoke parties.[46] Longstreth's lifestyle emphasizes integration of artistic production with domestic routines, utilizing home spaces for painting, writing, and filmmaking while prioritizing outdoor connectivity and practical, durable interiors that accommodate family needs over ostentatious design.[46] This setup reflects a deliberate balance between urban professional demands— including co-hosting the "Time Crisis" radio program—and a preference for unpretentious, nature-evoking environments amid Los Angeles's sprawl.[48][46]

Public Persona and Interests

Longstreth cultivates a public image as a multifaceted creative figure, blending rigorous artistic practice with candid commentary on music and culture, often described by collaborators as possessing a "powerful presence" and unfiltered "realness."[9] On his Apple Music 1 radio show Time Crisis, co-hosted with Ezra Koenig since 2015, he exhibits a curmudgeonly yet authentic style, openly dismissing trends or products he dislikes without concern for popularity.[9] This directness extends to his social media presence, particularly on X (formerly Twitter) under @dongstreth, where he shares enthusiasm for indie rock milestones, such as commemorating the 30th anniversary of Guided by Voices' Alien Lanes with a published oral history.[49] Beyond professional painting, Longstreth's interests encompass music as a persistent hobby, including performances with the Grateful Dead cover band Richard Pictures and the indie rock group Mountain Brews, the latter amassing over 30,000 monthly Spotify listeners.[9] [50] He values authenticity over commercial music pursuits, framing such endeavors as "hobby rock" while dedicating 40-hour weeks to studio painting.[9] His artistic focus reveals a fascination with Southern California's hybrid landscapes—merging natural elements like trees with commercial architecture—aiming to render beauty from "cookie cutter, soulless" suburban environments through earnest depiction rather than irony.[9] [2] This extends to motifs like tennis courts and academies in his works, suggesting an appreciation for recreational spaces amid urban sprawl.[51]

References

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