The artist exposes a unique underlying potential, transforming and juxtaposing fashion ads. In recontextualizing found images and their original physicality and intent, a new significance unfolds, generating distorted forms, sometimes even abstract pictures.
Afternoon Hallucinogenic
Priska C. Juschka Fine Art is pleased to present Afternoon Hallucinogenic, John
Sparagana's first solo exhibition with the gallery. In this new series of
works, Sparagana exposes a unique underlying potential within found images through a
process of transformation and juxtaposition. In recontextualizing their original
physicality and intent a new significance unfolds.
Sparagana typically utilizes common fashion ads the images that are most
prevalent in our everyday environment, which we identify with, compare ourselves to,
and lose ourselves in. Each work is composed of images sliced into very long, thin
strips, and then mixed and multiplied with different or identical ones.
The works emit a bodily, skin-like quality that vibrates with saturated colors and seducing
forms. The process of layering introduces an element of time that was formerly
absent its appearance pulsating and rhythmic, yet its narrative frozen and
dramatized. The resulting forms are exaggerated and distorted, at times transformed
into a state of abstraction.
By recycling existing magazine pages both the material substance and objective of
the image is altered. Thus these beautiful, yet banal and pragmatic images assume a
unique significance and become further fetishized, gaining a new and previously
unknown meaning. In so doing, Sparagana overrides their purely superficial nature
and brings to light an innate truth. These works are replete with lyrical intent,
rather than didactic, as Sparagana shifts their identity from pure information to
intricate poetry.
Sparagana was born in Rochester, NY and currently lives and works in both Chicago
and Houston. He holds an MFA from Stanford University, CA, and is an Associate
Professor at Rice University. He has participated in numerous exhibitions
nationally and internationally both solo and group in New York, Los
Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Naples, and Edinburgh, amongst others. He was also the
recipient of several prestigious awards including the National Endowment of the
Arts, the Cultural Arts Council of Houston and Cite' International Des Arts,
Paris. His work was recently acquired by The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and The
Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago. Sparagana is currently working on a
book in collaboration with the cultural critic and theorist Mieke Bal, which will
feature 26 critical essays by Bal responding to 26 images from his Sleeping Beauty
series (University of Chicago Press, Fall 2007).
Image: Chanel of Death, Magazine pages and archival adhesive on paper, 2007, 48 x 32 in. 121.92 x 81.28 cm.
Priska C. Juschka Fine Art
97 North 9th Street - Brooklyn, NY