Gallery OneTwentyEight
128 Rivington Street, 212-674-0244
East Village / Lower East Side
October 4 - October 27, 2012
Reception: Thursday, October 4, 6 - 9 PM
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We are delighted to announce the opening of Intitolato, a new group show at Gallery Onetwentyeight. Please join us in exploring the depths our five artists will go to in expressing the experiences that brought them into the world of art. Come Explore the flashing world of dreams of Paola Puppio, follow the intricate caper that gives birth to the photography of Scott Alger, ponder the “Standard Colors” of Domingo De Lucia, Answer the questions of Franciso Osorio, and Continue the dialogue with Bartus Bartolome.
Paola Puppio Representing the flashing world of the dreams using different techniques that reflect in a symbolic way imaginary travels, the coexistence with signs and characters generating an interior architecture with universal codes where the language has no limits.
Scott Alger Subjects are positioned by Alger and then, action: the lights flash, twist and turn as he dances around the posing figures, lights in hand. This intricate caper may last up to fifteen minutes depending on the intended size of the piece. It is not until the rolls of film are processed that their contents are revealed
Domingo De Lucia “Std Color “functions as a metaphor of the real. Every nuance that deviates from the norm is rejected in the same way they are repressed the behaviors, tastes and desires that exceed the established regulations.
Francisco Osorio The question becomes the focus on the plane as it is the focus in the lives of us all. We question who we are, what we do, where we come from and what we think. Sitting, walking, praying, with child and without, we question our very being every moment of everyday of our lives. The question is a part of life and for some the question is life.
Bartus Bartolomes A dialogue with the painting to capture the fragmentation of the image in the decomposition of the worldscopic chromoplasm of those colors that have driven crazy the plastic arts for so many centuries…