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Davide Sgambaro – NOPE!
Alberta Pane Gallery presents Davide Sgambaro’s frst solo exhibition in its Parisian space. Using an irreverent tone, Davide Sgambaro invites us to face playful scenarios with sculptures and installations relating to the world of entertainment, idleness and certain clichés linked to youth.
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47 rue de Montmorency - 75003 Paris
Vernissage: Saturday 21 May, from 3pm during Paris Gallery Weekend
Opening hours: Tue-Sat 11am - 7pm
Alberta Pane Gallery is pleased to present Davide Sgambaro's frst solo exhibition in its Parisian space. The exhibition consists of four bodies of work that form a single narrative and explore the limits an individual has when confronted to precarious situations. Using an irreverent tone, Davide Sgambaro invites us to face playful scenarios with sculptures and installations relating to the world of entertainment, idleness and to certain clichés linked to youth.
The installation entitled: Father, forgive them because they don’t know what they are doing, consists of a Sky dancer1 . Stuck at the back of the gallery, with its smiley face, the sculpture destroys itself as a result of its friction against the ceiling and the walls. The ideas of impediment and obstacle are then echoed by the sculptures entitled Calcinculo installed high on the wall. These sculptures are inspired on the hard-to-win prizes typical of the so-called Flying Chairs of Italian fairgrounds. The artworks present the objects that one must catch to win the prize during the ride. In these entertainment devices, the technique of Kick in the but performed by two people allows one to reach the object, grab it, and win the prize which is usually a free ride.
Furthermore, the ability to manage or to fnd the right strategy to achieve a goal is also present in the work The Bremen Musicians inspired by the namesake fable title writen by the brothers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm and published in 1819. In this fable four farm animals, deprived by their old age of their ability to work, are lef to their fate. During meeting by chance on the road, they decide to help each other and fnd a refuge to survive. In the course of this quest they fnd a house inhabited by thieves and, joining forces, they stand on top of each other. The thieves glimpse a monstrous fgure in the darkness. They think that the house is haunted by monsters and witches and run away, leaving the shelter to the animals. Referring to this fable, the artist presents an image of the Bremen musicians made with a digital collage of emojis. This reference to instant messaging relates to the generations Davide Sgambaro alludes to and to the theme of lack of security and stability2. This idea takes us to the last work in the exhibition: So-so. It is a foam plate normally used for furniture upholstery on which the artist draws a sad face by burning the surface with a cigarete. This burning creates a drawing that visually contrasts with the happy face of the smiliing dancer that keeps on trying to get out of the space before falling down, exhausted. Despite the smiling characters, the exhibition is a reaction to a precarious life, a narrative portrait of generations in which the adverb NOPE! (no!) seems to be a repetitive and amusing mantra in response to contemporary needs.
Thanks to the irony always present in his work, which contrasts with a certain melancholy, Davide Sgambaro creates intriguing narrative paradoxes that can depict extreme and precarious situations by evoking memories and common imaginary. The playful universe, the techniques used and the idea of art as an emotional language are elements that characterize the work of this artist, who is interested in the creation of a shared vocabulary vocabulary that aims at a unconventional visual communication.
1. Advertising device in the form of a nylon tube driven by an industrial ventilator. 2. Ian Bogost, a media and game designer, hires a deskilling of human life. He observes how automated technologies (from automatic toilet fushes to text message checkers) intensify a generalized sense of precariousness and unpredictability. Instead of adjusting to human needs, they force people to adapt to the unpredictable logic of machines. The supposed convenience of automated daily life is undermined by our lack of control, our confusion and the passivity to which technology forces us. Ian Bogost, Why nothing works more, Atlantic, February 23, 2007, the atlantic.com
Vernissage: Saturday 21 May, from 3pm during Paris Gallery Weekend
Opening hours: Tue-Sat 11am - 7pm
Alberta Pane Gallery is pleased to present Davide Sgambaro's frst solo exhibition in its Parisian space. The exhibition consists of four bodies of work that form a single narrative and explore the limits an individual has when confronted to precarious situations. Using an irreverent tone, Davide Sgambaro invites us to face playful scenarios with sculptures and installations relating to the world of entertainment, idleness and to certain clichés linked to youth.
The installation entitled: Father, forgive them because they don’t know what they are doing, consists of a Sky dancer1 . Stuck at the back of the gallery, with its smiley face, the sculpture destroys itself as a result of its friction against the ceiling and the walls. The ideas of impediment and obstacle are then echoed by the sculptures entitled Calcinculo installed high on the wall. These sculptures are inspired on the hard-to-win prizes typical of the so-called Flying Chairs of Italian fairgrounds. The artworks present the objects that one must catch to win the prize during the ride. In these entertainment devices, the technique of Kick in the but performed by two people allows one to reach the object, grab it, and win the prize which is usually a free ride.
Furthermore, the ability to manage or to fnd the right strategy to achieve a goal is also present in the work The Bremen Musicians inspired by the namesake fable title writen by the brothers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm and published in 1819. In this fable four farm animals, deprived by their old age of their ability to work, are lef to their fate. During meeting by chance on the road, they decide to help each other and fnd a refuge to survive. In the course of this quest they fnd a house inhabited by thieves and, joining forces, they stand on top of each other. The thieves glimpse a monstrous fgure in the darkness. They think that the house is haunted by monsters and witches and run away, leaving the shelter to the animals. Referring to this fable, the artist presents an image of the Bremen musicians made with a digital collage of emojis. This reference to instant messaging relates to the generations Davide Sgambaro alludes to and to the theme of lack of security and stability2. This idea takes us to the last work in the exhibition: So-so. It is a foam plate normally used for furniture upholstery on which the artist draws a sad face by burning the surface with a cigarete. This burning creates a drawing that visually contrasts with the happy face of the smiliing dancer that keeps on trying to get out of the space before falling down, exhausted. Despite the smiling characters, the exhibition is a reaction to a precarious life, a narrative portrait of generations in which the adverb NOPE! (no!) seems to be a repetitive and amusing mantra in response to contemporary needs.
Thanks to the irony always present in his work, which contrasts with a certain melancholy, Davide Sgambaro creates intriguing narrative paradoxes that can depict extreme and precarious situations by evoking memories and common imaginary. The playful universe, the techniques used and the idea of art as an emotional language are elements that characterize the work of this artist, who is interested in the creation of a shared vocabulary vocabulary that aims at a unconventional visual communication.
1. Advertising device in the form of a nylon tube driven by an industrial ventilator. 2. Ian Bogost, a media and game designer, hires a deskilling of human life. He observes how automated technologies (from automatic toilet fushes to text message checkers) intensify a generalized sense of precariousness and unpredictability. Instead of adjusting to human needs, they force people to adapt to the unpredictable logic of machines. The supposed convenience of automated daily life is undermined by our lack of control, our confusion and the passivity to which technology forces us. Ian Bogost, Why nothing works more, Atlantic, February 23, 2007, the atlantic.com
21
maggio 2022
Davide Sgambaro – NOPE!
Dal 21 maggio al 30 luglio 2022
arte contemporanea
Location
GALERIE ALBERTA PANE
Paris, Rue de Montmorency, 47, (Arrondissement de Paris)
Paris, Rue de Montmorency, 47, (Arrondissement de Paris)
Orario di apertura
Tuesday to Sunday 11:00 - 19:00
Autore