As one of the pioneers of digital painting since the 1990s, Marcaccio works in what he once called ‘the expanded field of painting’…
As one of the pioneers of digital painting since the 1990s, Marcaccio works in what he once called ‘the expanded field of painting’…
As one of the pioneers of digital painting since the 1990s, Marcaccio works in what he once called ‘the expanded field of painting’ merging painting with photo-digital techniques and sculptural 3D printing in order to redefine the pictorial genre. Analytically engaging with today’s flood of media images, Marcaccio takes a critical position toward the ma-nipulative power of images and digital processing techniques. His term paintant—a composite of painting and mutant—reflects the idea of the pictorial genre in constant redevelopment and in the context of the con-stant flux of digital images as well as of the shifting values and changing world views at the beginning of the 21st century. He first demonstrated this in front of a large international audience with his work Multiple-site Paintants at the 2002 edition of documenta.
Suspended by cables, Marcaccio’s sculptural work 3DEP3 transforms the gallery space into what appears to be an apocalyptic underwater sce-nario. 3DEP3 consists of an intriguing constellation of 3D printed, paint-ed objects made from colored plastic and pigmented silicone of various dynamic and organic shapes. It resembles an open expanded pictorial nervous system, in which, on closer inspection, we can discover abstract shapes alongside identifiable objects.
For our first participation at Gallery Weekend Beijing, Galerie Thomas Schulte presents the exhibition Paintants with works by Fabian Marcac-cio, featuring a suspended Environmental Painting titled 3DEP3 along-side wall-based Flex-Paintants.As one of the pioneers of digital painting since the 1990s, Marcaccio works in what he once called ‘the expanded field of painting’ merging painting with photo-digital techniques and sculptural 3D printing in order to redefine the pictorial genre. Analytically engaging with today’s flood of media images, Marcaccio takes a critical position toward the ma-nipulative power of images and digital processing techniques. His term paintant—a composite of painting and mutant—reflects the idea of the pictorial genre in constant redevelopment and in the context of the con-stant flux of digital images as well as of the shifting values and changing world views at the beginning of the 21st century. He first demonstrated this in front of a large international audience with his work Multiple-site Paintants at the 2002 edition of documenta.Suspended by cables, Marcaccio’s sculptural work 3DEP3 transforms the gallery space into what appears to be an apocalyptic underwater sce-nario. 3DEP3 consists of an intriguing constellation of 3D printed, paint-ed objects made from colored plastic and pigmented silicone of various dynamic and organic shapes. It resembles an open expanded pictorial nervous system, in which, on closer inspection, we can discover abstract shapes alongside identifiable objects.3DEP3 is complemented by several Flex-Paintants that hover slightly from the wall’s surface. Created in the last three years during the pan-demic, these works reveal a pronounced corporeality, even when set in tension with their own dissolution. In tandem with Marcaccio’s pro-cess-oriented approach, the experience of viewing—the process of per-ception—becomes a source of action in the paintings: their appearance changes depending on our position and proximity. A ghostly image seen from a distance reveals a complex (re)organizing structure when seen up close. At times, they cannot be fully experienced unless approached from a particular angle. The Flex-Paintants are sometimes even suggestive of molecular structures. Their fibers alternately intertwining and coming undone, they are like paintings being turned inside out—we are not looking at, but into them.
Identifiable figures and forms, or else suggestions of them, sometimes come through. We might recognize faces, grids and networks, plant-like tendrils and greenery, or some combination. Fingers meld with green vines, for example, simultaneously reaching out and getting reabsorbed into the elaborate tangle of constituent color segments. In one work, the indent of a face starts to resemble a pool—becoming a source of reflection for the face of the viewer, while burrowing into the surface like a muddy footprint. What is being emphatically demonstrated is that, like the body, painting is wet, ever-changing and in flux. Taking shape as a series of frozen moments, they could liquefy in an instant, further evolving into yet unseen variants.
Bridging digital technology and organic matter in aesthetic, material, and production, the works on view are highly articulated and textured, though in varying states of abstraction and decomposition. Their abstract and fluid nature leaves them susceptible to myriad associations, bringing an increased sense of intimacy and immediacy: always emerging, they never fully crystallize.
FABIAN MARCACCIO (BORN 1963 IN ROSARIO, ARGENTINA)Fabian Marcaccio was born in Rosario in Argentina in 1963. His work poses the question of whether traditional painting traditions can survive the digital age. In order to investigate this he uses printmaking transfer techniques to make his pieces, while manipulating generally held conven-tions of painting. This cutting-edge style has afforded him international acclaim since the 1990s. More recently he has relied upon digital and industrial techniques such as 3D-printing to infuse his painting process with spatial and temporal concerns. The results are enviromental paint-ings, animations and “paintants” that combine digitally manipulated imagery, sculptural form and three-dimensionally painted surfaces. Fa-bian Marcaccio was awarded the Bernhard Heiliger Award for Sculpture in 2011. He has made a name for himself through numerous internation-al solo exhibitions including Makasiini Contemporary Contemporary, Turku (2017), Casa Daros Rio de Jainero (2014), Centro Atlántico de Art Moderno, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (2013), Museum Lehmbruck (2012), Museum Haus Esters, Krefeld (2012), Georg-Kolbe Museum, Berlin (2011), FRAC, Auvergne Clermont-Ferrand (2005), Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (2005), DA2 Domus Artium 2002, Salamca (2005), Kunstmuseum Liechenstein (2004), Miami Art Museum (2004), Kölnischer Kunstverein and Württenbergischen Kunstverein (2000). Imporant group exhibitions include: Kunstmuseum Liechen-stein (2015), Southern California Institute of Architecture, Los Angeles (2014), FRA, Auvergne Clermont-Ferrand (2013), Museum Morsbroich (2011), Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt a.M. (2011), Biennale in Sevilla (2007), Kunstmuseum Bochum (2007), Riverside Park, New York (2006) and Documenta (2002).
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