Adrian Gazconās art is just as much about where he came from as where he is headed.
A potential taste of his future came in September, when his work hung on the wall of a pop-up art gallery during New York Fashion Week. The pop-up was curated by New York City-based street artist Hidji World and hosted by Ksubi, an Australian fashion label.
āI submitted and I didnāt even know I got chosen,ā said Gazcon, who didnāt see the initial email alerting him he was a top-40 finalist. ā(When) I saw the top 10 (email), Iām like, āWhat? This isnāt for real.āā
āI told my friends Iām going to New York. I donāt care, this doesnāt happen. This isnāt common around here. It was something I could never imagine.ā
The event, held from Sept. 7 to 11, was to announce a new collection from Hidji and Ksubi titled āFamily and Friends,ā which focused on experiences in the schoolyard and childhood innocence, according to an article in Modern Notoriety. The clothing would feature Ksubiās shapes and design paired with the vibrant work of Hidji.
Gazcon, 22, was one of 10 artists from around the world selected for the gallery. His piece, titled āParanoia,ā also drew from childhood nostalgia and experiences and depicts Courage from the cartoon āCourage the Cowardly Dogā in a distorted manner.
āThe cartoons that Iāve been painting are kind of like a representation of my childhood, anxiety and things that I dealt with,ā he said. āThe āParanoiaā one was based off anxiety (because), obviously, Courage is a very anxious character. I kind of related to that as a little kid. Iām just going back to my childhood and re-imagining things.ā
Growing up, Gazcon typified himself as a bit of an outcast.
āComing up as an artist here in Logansport, especially in a school, I felt like I never really fit in,ā he said. āI was always an artistic kid. I didnāt really have people to relate to me as an artist. Iām talking about art and itās not really a common thing around here.ā
His first painting was of Clifford the Big Red Dog when he was 5 years old. He said his mom laminated it and kept it. When he came across it recently, he realized how the work then was less about perfect techniques and more about capturing the feelings of his current self.
āThereās no right or wrong answer. Itās just whatever I feel, it goes on to the painting,ā he said.
That thinking has led him to his current artistic style, which he describes as a mix of cubism, neo-expressionism and freestyling. His favorite artists include Jean-Michel Basquiat, George Kondo, Frida Kahlo, Picasso and Aztec art.
āIām the student, and theyāre all my teachers teaching me,ā he said. āI just gather all the influence and reimagine how I would want to see it onto a canvas.ā
As a senior studying New Media, Art, and Technology (NMAT) at Indiana University Kokomo, he said he usually doesnāt plan out a piece before creating it. His focus is on being present in the moment and letting his hands travel where they want on a canvas, while keeping close attention to the elements of his piece.
āI just go onto a blank canvas and freestyle,ā he said. āWhatever comes to my mind, Iām just like āOK, this goes here.ā Itās like my mind automatically knows what to do, and Iām just going with the flow. That was like my thesis for my senior gallery exhibition. Just based off of tapping into the subconscious.
āI focus on just the basic elements: color, lines, shape, texture. When you put it all together, it becomes larger than it is.ā
His path to becoming an artist wasnāt an easy choice. As the first person in his family to go to college, he felt pressured when deciding what to do and what to commit to.
āWhen I got into college, I didnāt really know what to do,ā Gazcon said. āI was kind of lost. Iām the first one to go to college, so everything was new to me. Everybodyās going into regular stuff like (becoming a) lawyer (or) doctor, the common route that most people go.ā
āI want to be an artist, but Iām from Indiana. No oneās going to care. Like, I donāt have connections. I donāt know how Iām going to do it.ā
He began as an NMAT major before switching to general studies. While in general studies, he realized his passion still resided in being an artist and he switched back, even though he was still concerned about making the jump to being a full-time artist.
Gazcon began researching art history and philosophy.
āThose are the things that Iāve always loved since a little kid, philosophy especially, and learning how to make my art conceptual and have a purpose,ā he said. āI told myself if this is going to be my life, Iām going to have to make sacrifices, just be in my studio all day.ā
That work paid off when he was chosen for the pop-up gallery.
He was heavily influenced by artist collectives, such as New York-based rap group A$AP Mob and AWGE ā the latter of which was started by A$AP Rocky and includes Hidji.
āI never had any examples of other artists or little communities of artists (here), so when you go to New York and you see huge murals, a bunch of artists, (I thought) āthis is amazing,āā he said.
Gazcon implored anyone with a passion to pursue it.
āIt doesnāt even have to be art,ā he said. āWhatever your passion is … pursue it. Yeah, itās going to be hard, but itāll always pay off if you do something that you love.
āI would have never found that out if I never had taken that risk and really dedicated myself to it. So if anybody wants to be an artist, you can do it. You can do anything you want. Really I kind of proved that to myself.ā

