The Sucklord

The Sucklord (born Morgan Phillips March 27, 1969)[1][2]) is a New York pop artist.[3] He manufactures unlicensed action figures and toys through his company, Suckadelic.[3] The Sucklord appeared as a contestant in the second season of Work of Art: The Next Great Artist.[1] On September 10, 2012, the Sucklord appeared in the fifth episode of Bravo's Gallery Girls reality TV show, in which he produced limited editions of action figures and sold them at the girls' East Village shop, End of Century.

The Sucklord
The Sucklord in 2016
Born
Morgan Phillips

(1969-03-27) March 27, 1969
New York
NationalityAmerican
Known forFigurines
MovementPop art

The Sucklord has been a long-time fan of Star Wars and Star Wars merchandise and has been profiled for his own versions of Star Wars collectibles.[4] He contributed to series five and six of Topps' Star Wars Galaxy trading cards and produced three series of his own Suckpax cards.[5]

Phillips was born in the West Village and attended P.S. 41[2] and the High School for the Humanities, graduating in 1987.[6] He later attended an art school in Eugene, Oregon.[2] Phillips made his first reality TV appearance in the 2004 premiere episode of VH1's Can't Get a Date.[2][7] Phillips produced the YouTube shows Toylords of Chinatown and Microsexuals.

Exhibition

  • January 2011, Suckadelic, Boo-Hooray Gallery, New York City.[3]
gollark: I hope this is a joke.
gollark: > hdds are more reliable than ssds in servers!!!
gollark: On SwitchCraft many things are basically free, such as land, housing (if you don't care about location) and cobblestone, some things are probably not that scarce (iron, advanced computers), and some things are pretty scarce and thus valuable, such as high-end enchanted books and shulker boxes.
gollark: Also, some stuff like enchanted books are fairly scarce.
gollark: Opus has a good one, apparently, but managing turtles is still annoying.

References

  1. Tucker, Ken (12 October 2011). "'Work of Art: The Next Great Artist' recap: Enter the Sucklord". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  2. Dodero, Camille (28 September 2011). "The Suckadelic Era". The Village Voice. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  3. Thill, Scott (13 January 2011). "Sucklord's Bootleg Sci-Fi Toys Freak Star Wars". Wired. Retrieved 31 October 2011.
  4. "Star Wars Merchandise". National Public Radio. 12 May 1999. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  5. Harris (5 October 2011). "The Sucklord to Appear on Bravo TV's Work Of Art". Non-Sport Update. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  6. "Humanities alumni Morgan Phillips makes it to prime time tv". Bayard Rustin High School For The Humanities Alumni Website. 8 May 2006. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  7. "Meet Morgan". Can't Get a Date. Retrieved 2 November 2011.


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