He’s a-head of his time.
Chris Wink, a New York native and one of the founding members of the iconic performance art company Blue Man Group, has found a new way to express his imaginative soul on the outside — by rocking a variety of intricate mohawks he calls “art fins.”
“I’ve got this bald head and, in a weird way, it’s kind of like a blank canvas,” Wink told The Post.
“I used to have hair — with Blue Man we would put bald caps on — but at a certain point, I said, ‘F—k it. I’ll just shave it off,’” he said.
And similar to how people express their personalities through hair and nails, he realized he could do that with his head.
Now he’s “making baldness cool.”
His wearable pieces range from sculptures made of toy trolls, neon forks, Pez dispensers, mini snow globes, blacklight reactive sea anemones and plastic sushi and are often compared to mohawks — but that isn’t his favorite term.
“I don’t love calling it a mohawk because that’s a hairstyle and these are just art … art fins on my head,” he said.
‘Sense of delight’
Wink has lost count of how many pieces he’s made, but he creates a few a week.
“I’ve spent way too much … thousands,” he said. He makes many of them himself with items he finds online or using random tchotchkes from his travels, and crafts items for specific events or just to walk around in them for fun.
“I was wearing one on the street and Chris Rock came up to me and said, ‘Wow, dude, that’s crazy,’” he recalled.
He loves wearing his “punk rock” and “aerodynamic” looks out and about because it catches people off guard and gives them “a sense of delight.”
Wink, a dad of three, recently wore a headpiece that said “Guts” — named after Olivia Rodrigo’s album — when he went to her concert with his kids. Unlike him, his children don’t love drawing attention to themselves.
“I’m always like, ‘Kids, let’s do something crazy,’ and they’re like, ‘No, that’s dumb,’” he lamented.
However, another dad at the concert gave him major kudos.
“My daughter made me wear this glitter but you win the prize,” the fellow father told him.
Wink World
He first got the idea for the headpiece in 2021 after opening his psychedelic funhouse, Wink World, at the immersive entertainment venue AREA15 in Las Vegas, where he was the “Director of Cool S–t” for three years.
He has since become their creative consultant instead so he can focus on Wink World full-time.
Last fall, another Wink World opened at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, but the original Wink World started in his Manhattan apartment — which itself is a trippy playground.
The idea behind Wink World is that it’s an immersive dreamscape in which there’s “one eye open and one eye closed,” he said.
“The open eye is looking at the world, like at forks,” he explained while pointing to an art fin made of neon utensils. “The closed eye is the world of imagination, dreams, visions and kind of blending them so there’s this hybrid world — and I applied that to my bald head.”
In that world, the character Wink, inspired by Chris’ real last name, “winks.” The fantastical result: “What he is thinking manifests on his head … it just sprouts right out.”
His inspirations are, at times, completely random.
“When I was at Mall of America, I would just roam around looking for stuff I can just fit on my head,” he explained.
While on vacation in Brazil, he wasn’t sure what kind of plug-in adapters to purchase, so he got a bunch and later turned them into art.
When he was in Woodstock, he bought a bunch of mini guitars, and another time he purchased stuff “from a touristy New York shop I would never go into,” Wink confessed.
“I could just picture their faces, they’re like, ‘Hey, this dude just left, and he bought 12 miniature snow globes, not just two or one,’” he quipped.
Sometimes he’ll enlist other artists to create pieces for him, such as a blacklight-reactive, sacred-geometry art fin by artist Max Steiner.
Express yourself
People often come up to him to ask how he sticks the art to his head — or, more importantly, how he gets it off.
That information is “proprietary,” he said. However, he joked, “If someone wants to spend time in the adhesion community, they will find their answers for themselves.”
Wink considers his headpieces a “form of grown-up play … which I’ve been doing since Blue Man” began in 1987.
“What I learned then and what I tell young people now is that I found my way to express myself. Some people will just beat themselves up and try to fit into an existing art form,” he explained.
And you won’t catch him taking himself too seriously, either.
He said headpieces aren’t high-art – they’re fun and will hopefully inspire people to break the mold.
“I just want people to laugh for a second and realize hey, we can all be a little silly, we don’t have to follow all the rules … I think this is the beauty of the message in many parts of our culture right now, which is celebrating people expressing who they are. And for me — I like to wear art on my head.”
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