Nicholas Di Genova — Preemptive Evolution

Exhibition

Drawing

Nicholas Di Genova
Preemptive Evolution

Past: November 10 → December 3, 2011

Dukan Hourdequin gallery presents Preemptive Evolution, the first solo exhibition in France by Canadian artist Nicholas Di Genova (1981).

Nicholas Di Genova has developed a unique practice that is as firmly rooted in the utterly fantastical as it is in the deeply scientific. His depictions of hybrid creatures examine wildlife illustration through a Sci-fi lens. Di Genova’s highly detailed, and often encyclopaedic investigations of the natural world, yield monstrosities that are the most unlikely of amalgamations — these can be, for instance, a fusion of cat, goat and snake with cormorant, or tortoise merging into carnivorous plant and even a toad with eight, tentacle-like tongues. His depictions are obviously imagined; but Di Genova’s illustrative precision, makes these Audubon caricatures almost plausible.

His materials are simple; he looks to the conventions of analogue animation, which employs gouache paint on Mylar, or the very basic approach of ink on paper. But Di Genova pushes line-work and a compact colour palette to the extreme; his seamless and fluid application of medium is in the service of an unparalleled intricacy of image. From the tiniest black and white elements (which can be a mere couple of centimetres square) to the robust and colourful, full-sized works, Di Genova’s articulation of shape and texture is nothing short of masterful.

For this exhibition the artist presents a new work entitled 10,000 Vertebrates which takes the form of a genus grid comprising 10,000 micro-portraits — perhaps an periodic table of this morphed and grotesque animal species. This particular work is pivotal; certainly because it embodies Di Genova’s relentless capacity for minutiae and detail but moreover, it gives reference to the research back story of his practice. From books, the internet, film and television — this is a practice contingent on mining a diversity of source materials, from factual to absolutely fiction. Not merely a random selection of beaks, claws, fangs, feathers, fur and scales, these creatures are built conceptually first — each telling a distinctive story that is equal parts biology and mythology.

William Huffman
  • Opening Thursday, November 10, 2011 at 6 PM
Dukan Gallery Gallery
Map Map
03 Le Marais Zoom in 03 Le Marais Zoom out

24, rue Pastourelle

75003 Paris

T. 09 81 34 61 83

www.galeriedukan.com

Arts et Métiers
Filles du Calvaire
Rambuteau

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 1 PM – 7 PM
Other times by appointment

The artist

  • Nicholas Di Genova