SCI-Arc to Open Pioneering Exhibition by Fabian Marcaccio on October 18
SCI-Arc is pleased to announce that it will be hosting an exhibition featuring the work of Argentinian artist Fabian Marcaccio, entitled Paintants Lab. The exhibition will run from October 18 through December 1 in the SCI-Arc Gallery, with an opening reception held on October 18 at 7pm.
Marcaccio (b. 1963, Rosario, Argentina) is one of the pioneers of digital painting. He started his practice in the 1990s with the Altered Genetics of Painting, emphasizing the alteration of pictorial content in relation to biogenetics. He moved to an urban scale with a new type of muralism with his Environmental Paintings. These works unified aspects of film, urbanism, architecture, and painting.
Currently he is involved in a pictorial reengineering of painting with the use of 3D printing, which he defines as hyperstructural painting or techno-brutalism. Marcaccio presents Paintants Lab as a dynamic structural atlas; “a constellation of pictorial complexity.” The lab is constantly evolving and serves as the core of his research. For Marcaccio, the effect and mood of the lab is in its multiplicity of pictorial concepts, modes, and techniques—not contingent on any single drawing, digital print, animation, or 3D-printed object. Marcaccio considers its force to be “in the innumerable branches of evolution and mutation through material, technique, space, and time.”
Marcaccio lives and works in New York City. He has exhibited widely throughout the United States, Europe, and South America. Major solo exhibitions include Paintant Stories, Casa Daros, Rio de Janeiro (2014); Some USA Stories, Krefeld Kunstmuseen, Krefeld Germany (2012); The Structural Canvas Paintants, Lehmbruk Museum, Duisburg Germany (2012); and From Altered Paintings to Paintants, Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (2004).
Major group exhibitions include Summer Projects, MoMA PS1, New York (2002); documenta 11, Kassel, Germany (2002); and the 44th Biennial of Contemporary American Painting at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC (1995). Marcaccio’s work is represented in the collections of the Whitney Museum of Art, MoMA, Blanton Museum of Art, Miami Museum of Art (MAM), and the Museum für Moderne Kunst (MMK), among others.