Sunday, November 22, 2009

Meden Agan.

Meden Agan was one of three commands carved into the
ancient Greek temple of the Oracle at Delphi.
It means nothing in excess or everything in moderation.

Installation shot.

This was an installation using only found objects to address
what we leave behind as humans. The work begins as a tiny pebble and
works its way up the wall to a shelf so high
that its contents are un-viewable.

Text created with scrap paper and a found can of spray paint.


Combine of found objects 25" x 15" for each.

This piece used the dialectics of man made by-products and
natural by-products to question the idea of waste.
Detail: From left, Bag with fruit peels, rock salt, sugar,
seeds (various), leaves and flower bud.
Detail: From right, Bag with rubber band, razor blade, cigarette butt,
nail, paper scraps, dust from subway car.


Plastic bags fused together. 9' x 6'.


Meden Agan was a solo show
by Vincent Alexander Finazzo
at the Happy Collaborationist Exhibition Space
in March of 2009.


Night Sky.

Night Sky is a performance about controlling a specific location,
in this case the dark, star filled sky.


Night Sky. By Vincent Alexander Finazzo, Fall 2008


As the simple but forceful action takes place,
slowly the image of the sky fades out. The environmental responses to human interactions is the drive behind this work.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Installation Kit #1

Installation Kit #1 was a performative sculpture that
provided basic materials to the viewers to
be installed in the space provided.

A blank chart was attached to the back wall for participants to document
themselves and the time they interacted with the sculpture.

Every viewer was encourage to interact with the objects
provided in any way they wished.

Over the course of the night the sculpture evolved into an impromptu installation that provided more information about the participants, than the sculpture itself. Instead of people interacting with the materials provided in a Duchampion weaving of the space like manner, people were mostly destructive. Through out the night a digital camera was cut in half, a whole roll of tape was un-raveled and gathered into a ball, and a radio was disassembled. What does this say about people when they are given complete freedom to interact in any way they choose?

After understanding the energy of the crowed through out the
night I decided to end the sculpture with abrasive action.


Installation Kit #1 was performed
at "12". An exhibition at the Happy Collaborations
Exhibition Space in December of 2008
By Vincent Alexander Finazzo

Store.



Store is a performative sculpture that addresses the idea of value
in obsolescent objects. In experimenting with
placement and the natural aesthetics of the found material,
different degrees of value become projected onto each item.

Store. panoramic view

By the use of shelf's to physically "lift" the objects off the ground and
up to eye level. Here they can be examined much like a
new watch or can of un-opened soup. After the investigation takes place
a viewer can determine a value they see appropriate for the object.
Then they pick up receipt and complete it.

Receipt: silkscreen on pages of found encyclopedia from 1968, Volume P.

Found jigsaw blade preserved in found mason jar.

East Shelf. various found materials

West Shelf. various found materials.


Front Desk with Receipts.

Store was executed in
March of 2009
by Vincent Alexander Finazzo