Showing posts with label Nick Paparone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nick Paparone. Show all posts

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Born to Be Wild and a Public Service Announcement


Nick Paparone and Jamie Dillon on "Born to Be Wild", which will be part of the Abington Sculpture Park for at least two years.

On Sunday I helped fellow Copy gallerists Nick Paparone and Jamie Dillon christen their new outdoor sculpture, Born to Be Wild at Abington Art Center's Sculpture Park. Born to Be Wild is a great hairy mound of dirt and grass with a bell on top of it that brings to mind games like "king of the hill" or that weird sense of achievement you get from walking up an incline of some sort. The bell works as an affirmation of your achievement, an audible "I was here".

It occurred to me that I ought to mention going out to Abington as a day trip that will help you beat the summer heat. The sculpture park is in a beautiful woods with lots of tree coverage. Trees provide much needed oxygen and shade that you don't really get from the City of Philadelphia.


Sylvia Benitez's "Hatshepsut" is among the many sculptures also on view at the park

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Nick Paparone at Vox Populi

King Kiosk

Nick Paparone
Vox Populi
Cliffs, Bluffs and Steamy Lowlands
Through June 1st.


Cliffs, Bluffs and Steamy Lowlands , Nick Paparone's first exhibition at Vox Populi, almost smells like a male adolescent that hasn't yet learned to use deodorant. If each separate sculpture and print were a painting you could say Mr. Paparone's palette was heavy on the reds and yellows associated with fast food restaurants, comic books, and the logos of corporate america. The work is compelling and repulsive at the same time.

The duel manipulated posters of Cindy Crawford; 400 Horsepower #1 and 2 (Mr. Paparone cleverly used the one with bananas for hair as his announcement card) are so gorgeous you almost want to lick them. In them Cindy is glistening in her revealing yellow bathing suit, chest puffed out, feminine and yet looking remarkably strong. The addition of fruit to her head turns the image upside down; instead of being a subject of masturbation and sexual fantasy her image becomes absurdist in nature. If this is representative of a Freudian-type fear of being dominated by sex then the artist has made a marvelous attempt at exorcising the demon.


400 Horsepower #2

The tour de force of the exhibition is easy enough to find as it dominates the entire space, leaving the other artworks little room to breathe; King Kiosk is a about the size of a garden shack with no entrance and completely covered by comic books. The eyes at the bottom of the structure, compounded with the sticks jutting out the top (which to me read as a sort of deer-antler-like attachment) lend the object animate properties, yet it has a shelf, almost (obviously) like a kiosk. Perhaps most mysterious is the fact that it wears chains. If I were to draw conclusions they would again be sexual, adolescent, and angst-ridden in nature. It is an object that seems like it could explode from the various forces pulling at it at any instant.

A moment of rest, though it too seems a little dangerous comes, quite literally, from a light in the corner. The Wonder Wander, a stand alone corner lamp, seemingly circa 1990, has a motorized spinning globe, laminated with aluminum foil and colored with markers, about it's middle. Immediately I think of this song.


The Wonder Wander

(Bravo Nick!)

(It should be noted that all the exhibits at Vox Populi are good right now and in due time I hope to talk about Stefan Abrams and Jack Sloss.)

Friday, May 2, 2008

TONIGHT IS FIRST FRIDAY (The Fish is Bananas Mr. Damien Hirst):



Copy Galley Presents: Mono Fish

A Live Performance Arranged By Jamie Dillon

Opening this Friday: May 2, 6-11 p.m. One Night Only

Copy Gallery (gee Nick advertise on Copy's website a little bit more why don't you?)

VOX POPULI: Nick Paparone's Cliffs, Bluffs and Steamy Lowlands, A Jack Sloss video, plus Eva Wylie and Stefan Abrams.



The Wexler Gallery hosts a group show with a Damien Hirst (Randell Sellers, Adelaide Paul, Tim Tate, Anne Siems, Dirk Staschke and Joe Boruchow) in it. Read this.

201 N 3rd. Opens tonight 5-8!

ON SUNDAY (May 4th)!!!!!!!! DO NOT FORGET!!!!!!! ZOE STRAUSS 1-4 UNDER I-95 at Front and Mifflin!!!!!! PHOTOGRAPHS!!!!!!!!!!!!! EVEN IF IT RAINS!!!!!!!!!!

And in the future this looks way cool:



Taller Puertorriqueño, Galería Lorenzo Homar presents Miguel Luciano.

May 9 – July 19, 2008. Opening Reception Friday, May 9th 5:30-8:30 p.m.

Friday, January 4, 2008

New Years

This post is dedicated to Dave Dunn because he wants to see more of this nonsense.



So my New Year looks great in pictures, but I threw up five times and missed the Mummer's Parade:



Wizard of Oz shown with The Dark Side of the Moon.



Tostadas.



Made by Ben.



Tricia eats.




People take pictures.



But it's hard to tell if Jorge:




Is prettier then Nick:



Oh Well.



I guess. . .



It doesn't. . .



Really matter.



Nothing does.