Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Art Chatter Group Exhibition 6/2 to 7/7 - Buchanan Gallery


Art Chatter Critique Group Exhibition - Buchanan Gallery  - 220 25th Street - Galveston, TX 77550

Artists’ ArtWalk Opening Reception - Saturday, June 2, 6-9 PM

Exhibition runs through July 7, 2012


Art Chatter Critique Group is a Houston collective of established mid-career visual artists who defy the stereotype of the lone artist in isolated studio practice. This community provides its members a supportive forum for the exchange of ideas, information, and critical responses. Members produce individual work in a variety of media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, print making, and fabric arts and utilize multiple art strategies, including abstraction, surrealism, and incorporation of text.



Monday, March 26, 2012

Nicola Parente Fotofest Biennial 2012 Exhibition


Inspired by Parente’s travel to Ethiopia in 2011, this photography exhibition focuses on the abstract of light as it was experienced by the artist during his stay in Bishangari on Lake Langano.  Bishangari is an eco-site, a natural wilderness, a wildlife sanctuary, secluded beach and lodge.  It is a natural retreat of breathtaking beauty that combines five ecological zones;- wetlands, beach and lake, the forest, the dry pumice rocks and the acacia shrub. Parente has captured nuances of this beauty in these stunning photographs without using any digital manipulation. Also showing are recent photography works byMiwa Nishimura.


Where: Gremillion &Co. Fine Art, Annex Building,  2501 Sunset Blvd, Houston, TX 77005 (MAP)
When: Opening Reception Thursday March 29, 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm 
Exhibition Dates: March 29 through April 19, 2012, Gallery open Tues - Sat 10-5

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Parente Solo Exhibition at Manuel Felguerez Abstract Art Museum, Zacatecas Mexico

December 2011 to March 2012

Nicola Parente, Italian Born, Houston based artist,  is currently exhibiting “Al Borde del Despertar”, 30 medium to large scale painting at the prestigious Manuel Felguerez Abstract Art Museum in Zacatecas Mexico. The Felguerez Museum is one of the largest and only museums in the world who's focus is Abstract Art. This is Parente's first solo Museum exhibition in Mexico. Exhibition runs through April 9, 2012



Photos by Aaron Courtland Photography

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Parente recent press: El Diario Mexico


Esparza Donaji, “Nicola Parente despierta sus sentimientos”, El Diario NTR, Mexico, December 14 2011


Monday, August 29, 2011

Nicola Parente Cadillac Texas Spirit Honoree - September 2011

Artist Nicola Parente honored as Cadillac Texas Spirit Honoree. Comercial to air on KHOU11 (CBS affiliate) during the month of September. Producer/Director/DP: Chris Multop, Assistant Camera: Davis Atkins, Audio: John Lance, Editor: Nick Geist.

Click here to see the commercial http://vimeo.com/28300207



Saturday, February 26, 2011

Five Reasons to Visit Lower Oak Lawn this Weekend


My Dallas show made the top 5  list to visit Lower Oak Lawn this weekend, coming in at number 3.

Article by Kendall Shiffler.





#3. Get your art on at Nicola Parente’s Exhibit Opening at Gremillion 
Take a breather from your day of exploring the district by checking out LOL’s newest art exhibit, Edge of Awaking by Nicola Parente. The Houston-based artist, inspired by the words of Henry David Thoreau, embraces negative space to evoke a sense of limitlessness.
n the paintings comprising the series, Parente embraces negative space to evoke a sense of limitlessness. On a predominantly white ground, lines of black and intermittent color appear and re-appear in ever-changing intervals and variant shades whose only clear boundary is the edge of the medium.

Parente works from his studio in Houston, Texas. Born in Italy, he draws from a rich Italian heritage and a deep well of cross-cultural experiences to bring his art to life. Most recently, Parente’s work was selected for Texas Art 2010 juried exhibition. In 2009, his work was featured in an exhibition, Transparent/Translucent, at the Museum Gallery, University of Texas, in San Antonio. 

Thursday, February 24, 2011

To The Edge by Alex Copeland, Dallas Observer







There is a hazy, oppressive boundary between awake and asleep that many of us struggle through each morning, whether it's the groggy, pre-coffee sleepwalk or the stubborn fight between a person's obligations and his under-rested body. This half-awake state is the subject of Houston-based Italian artist Nicola Parente’s  series of paintings in Edge of Awakening, a new exhibit at the Gremillion &Co. Fine Art gallery. The exhibit showcases Parente's expressive abstract paintings that transition between darkness and light, interrupted only by the boundaries of the canvas itself. 

Friday, January 7, 2011

Parente recent press in Kenton Magazine

Kenton Magazine
Miami's Satellite Art Fairs: Red Dot, Scope & Art Miami
by Cheryl Moody
January 19, 2011

"Italian-born Nicola Parente, exhibiting with the artist collective force, Aleatoric Gallery of Houston, Texas, embeds acrylic, charcoal, ink and pencil, to infuse shadows and hues into gorgeous abstract paintings. Masculine, majestic, and minimal. Balancing dark and light. Lovely and haunting! "




(to read full article, click on tittle)

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Parente selected to be a Juror for the 40th Anniversary – Bayou City Art Festival Memorial Park 2011


Bayou City Art Festival Memorial Park 2011 will hold its projected jury at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston on November 18, 2010. Over 1200 artists applied, and the top 300 will be invited to participate in the upcoming festival. 

This years panel of juror include: 
  • Linda Darke - Owner, Darke Gallery
  • Richard Fluhr - painter and Bayou City Art Festival Board Member Emeritus
  • Nicola Parente - painter/visual artist and Bayou City Art Festival Board Member
  • Alex Rosa - Art Director at 002houston Magazine
  • Cindi Strauss - Curator of Modern and Contemporary Decorative Arts and Design at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
  • Fletcher Thorne-Thomsen, Jr. - FotoFest Board Member and Founder of Vine Street Studios
  • Bart Truxillo - preservation architect, art collector, Bayou City Art Festival Board Member
  • Karen Turner-Smith - Director of Bulgari in the Galleria
During the past 39 years, the Bayou City Art Festivals have raised more than $2.6 million for local organizations, and continue to increase their biannual donations with each festival. As a result of October’s successful Bayou City Art Festival Downtown presented by Capital One Bank, ACA will present its current Nonprofit Partners with a total of $126,000.

Established in 1972, the Art Colony Association (ACA) is a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to producing high quality art festivals and events to provide financial support to local nonprofit organizations. During the past 39 years, the Art Colony Association, producer of Bayou City Art Festival Downtown in the fall and Bayou City Art Festival Memorial Park in the spring, has raised more than $2.6 million for local nonprofit organizations. The Festivals are funded in part by grants from the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance. Visitwww.bayoucityartfestival.comfor more information.

Parentes artwork part of Gambol, Juried Exhibition, Art League Houston, Nov 19-Dec 17, 2010


One of Nicola Parente’s artworks, Illuminare,  was accepted in this years Gambol juried exhibition at Art League Houston. This years juror was Miranda Lash, Curator of Contemporary and Modern Art, Museum of Art in New Orleans. Over 500 entries were submitted and only 55 artists were selected. The exhibition runs November 19, 2010 – December 17, 2010.
2010 SELECTED ARTISTS:  Kelly Alison, Cody Arnall, Last Ashen, WM Kelly Bailey,Elli Barnwell, Tania Botelho, Daniel Brents, April Bushnell, Mel Bydalek, Doug Cason, Rafael Castanet, Kristin Cliburn, Julio Crews, Andrew Cunningham, Judy Dekan, Robert Douglas, Jane Eifler, Toyin Folorunso, Josh Garcell, Helen Gerritzen, Lee Ann Gorman, Michelle Guyod, Hakeem Hassan, Luke Haynes, Sarah Hazel, Gemma Herrero Barclay, Maria Hughes, Antonio Hurtado, Peter Janecke, Charlie Jean Sartwelle, Jeff Jennings, Lindsey Maestri, John Manes, Mark Masterson, Emily Mitchell, Kia Neill, Anita Nelson, Patrick Nguyen, Christopher Olson, Crystal Owens, Nicola Parente, Kristy Peet, Mason Rankin, Sue Reeves, Caroline Roberts, Wiley Robertson, Lynn Ruoff, Magid Salmi, Kay Sarver, Caroline Sharpless, Shirlette Thompson, Patrick Turk, Vernon, Angela Whitford, Samuel Wukusick
Opening reception Friday, November 19, 2010 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Dallas Modern Luxury Magazine, November 2010




Nicola Parente pictured in the November issue of Dallas Modern Luxury Magazine during Gremillion & Co. Fine Art, inaugural exhibition in Dallas. Parente pictured with Rebecca Lightfoot and Barbara Bernstein.

To celebrate the new cool-kid digs at 2251 Vantage St., gallery owner Ron Gremillion hosted a cocktail reception that capped off a day packed with creative scenes--the Dallas Art Dealers Association's Fall Gallery Walk. Crowding Gremillion's industrial chic space, art aficionados mulled over intrepid pieces while mingling with a host of artists in attendance. The inaugural exhibit features must-see material from national and international artists represented by the gallery over the past 30 years.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Nicola Parente to exhibit at Red Dot Art Fair during Art Basel week in Miami, December 1-5, 2010

See the work of Allan Rodewald, Ted Lincoln, J. Coleman Miller, Andrew Schrock and Nicola Parente at the RED DOT Art Fair during Art Basel week in sunny Miami Florida, December 1st thru the 5th. AleatoricArt is a Houston based gallery of selected international artists who allow the laws of physics to guide their creative vision, seeking out art born of natural causes and daring to leave some things purely to chance. By developing a deeper artistic understanding of the forces that have governed our universe since the beginning of time, these courageous innovators have discovered unique ways of collaborating with nature to produce some of the most beautiful and compelling chance-based images in contemporary art.


Red Dot Art Fair is located across the street from Art Miami and next to Scope and Art Asia. Photo Miami is also a few blocks away... At this Midtown Miami location there is ample parking and amenities to serve the art public, creating an art fair mecca. Last year, Red Dot Miami had over 15 thousand visitors, and this year traffic will increase with the perfect addition of Scope and Art Asia to their lot. Red Dot Art Fair is a 30 thousand square foot venue, hosting fine photography, painting, sculpture and works on paper, as chosen and presented by USA and international art dealers.
 

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Review in Houston Chronicle by MOLLY GLENTZER - Oct 22, 2010


Review in Houston Chronicle by MOLLY GLENTZER calls "Terminus"... "one of Walsh's best-conceived pieces, shows the power of collaboration. His partners are the expressive string ensemble Two Star Symphony and artist Nicola Parente, whose lush abstract paintings and urban video (on an installation that chops up the images) give context to the movement."...






Dance: Walsh goes on a limb
By Molly Glentzer 
Oct. 22, 2010

This is a story about arms and the man. The man being the much-lauded choreographer Jirƭ KyliƔn, and the arms he most likely originated being the twitchy, articulated limbs that are now nearly as ubiquitous as classical ballet's port de bras.
Often happening while bodies are otherwise still, these arms are the legs, so to speak, of the movement; they jerk, jab and fret like the feet of Balanchine dancers.
They are everywhere in Dominic Walsh Dance Theater's First Course program — in a stunning duet adapted from KyliĆ”n's stark27'52" and in Walsh's Medea and Terminus, both of which read like odes to the Czech master.
It's a coup for DWDT to add even a piece of 27'52" to its rep. In the U.S., only Hubbard Street Dance Chicago owns the entire dance, created for Netherlands Dance Theater II in 2002. The name refers to its 27- minute, 52-second length.
DWDT's version of the big duet, created for a gala, bristles with suspense, enhanced by Kees Tjebbes' moody lighting. Set to a quietly percussive section of Dirk Haubrich's score, with parts spoken in French and German, it seems to be about primal urges, a struggle for control and perhaps death. At the end, the dancers lie under a large strip of marley - soft vinyl flooring common in dance studios - which made me think of earth piled on graves.
Thursday, Felicia McBride (topless for much of the dance) and Walsh gave it good tension. She danced with angry vulnerability to his strong power-play, and they handled Kylian's tough, inventive partnering as if they'd done it for years. Those jagged arms, in this piece, add a sense of desperate urgency, offset by moments when they're outstretched and solid as steel.
That kind of contrast might have helped Medea, which felt like an excerpt but wasn't. Walsh's program notes suggest he's exploring the title character "as a demi-god, woman and mother" through three dancers, but I couldn't tell who was who.
McBride, Rachel Meyer and Marissa Leigh Gomer, their hair braided underneath big headbands, gave it everything they could. In addition to arms, Walsh loves a finely-extended leg, a beautiful turnout and exquisitely arched feet; all of which this trio of ballerinas has in abundance. He also loves sinewy spines, and his frequent use of them makes for some amazingly ripped abs. Walsh has steadily demanded more of his dancers over the years, and the current crop has the sleek vibe of a top European dance company.
Terminus, one of Walsh's best-conceived pieces, shows the power of collaboration. His partners are the expressive string ensemble Two Star Symphony and artist Nicola Parente, whose lush abstract paintings and urban video (on an installation that chops up the images) give context to the movement.
Walsh plays effectively with music visualization. Quirky, plucky moments in the score stand out with equally cheeky quivering legs and feet.
The arm business gets a little silly when a dancer seems to be led by her outstretched index finger, which is apparently possessed by some alien virus that spreads into the hand, goes all creepy-crawly over her face, then infects a leg. A slow-motion sequence to repetitive strings goes on too long. But those quibbles dissipate when the music turns gypsy-folkish, and the dancers bounce in with sour-faced humor.
Randolph Ward, deftly and gently riffing on Mr. Bojangles in one of the first section's solos, got the most biting laughs. Domenico Luciano and Meyer were strong and sensuous in the final duet, which brings the painting motif full circle. They have blue paint on their hands, and as they touch each other during their partnering, each body becomes a moving canvas.
For that idea, I put my arms to clapping.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Nicola Parente creates the set design for Dominic Walsh Dance Theaters "Terminus", Oct 21, 22, 23 at 7:30PM Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, Zilkha Hall



3 programs in one evening:
Join Dominic Walsh Dance Theater for the “first course” of our season... the centerpiece of this tantalizing mixed rep program is the Texas premiere of an intense excerpt from 27’52 by icon JiÅ™Ć­ KyliĆ”n. KyliĆ”n is considered to be amongst the most prominent and brilliant choreographers in the world today, and 27’52” is the most recent KyliĆ”n piece being performed in the U.S. The program also includes the U.S. premiere of Walsh’s Medea, a new work commissioned by Teatro San Carlo that premiered in Italy in 2009, along with a revival of his collaborative Terminus set to a score composed and performed live by Two Star Symphony. Named after the Roman god of boundaries and location, Terminus is motivated by Nicola Parente’s The Edge of Urban Time series and features a video/painting installation created by the artist.


When: October 21, 22, 23 at 7:30 PM
Where: Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, Zilkha Hall, 800 Bagby, Houston, TX


Tickets $25 to $52
Order by phone 713-315-2525 or online dwdt.org

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Discussion with Nicola Parente at Gremillion &Co Fine Art, Oct 2nd, 11:30-1:00 pm

A discussion with Nicola Parene. Topic: The paintings included in the exhibition Edge of Awakening. Special performance by Duo Scordatura: Nicholas Leh Baker, violin and Faith Magdalene Jones, viola.

Saturday, October 2, 2010
at Gremillion &Co. Fine Art
Artist Reception - 11:30 - 12:00
Performance - 12:00 - 12:15
Discussion - 12:15 - 12:45

Light hors d'oeuvres and mimosas served.
Please RSVP w number of guests to Harwood Taylor (713) 471-6379
or email harwood_t@gremillion.com

Monday, September 20, 2010

Parente's work exhibited in Dallas as part of Gremillion &Co. Fine Art Inaugural Exhibition



Nicola Parente's artwork will be featured during the inaugural opening of Gremillion &Co. Fine Art - Dallas. Opening reception, Saturday, September 25, 2010, 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM. 

Featuring works by national and international artists represented by Gremillion &Co over the last 30 years.

Gremillion &Co. Fine Art, Inc.
2251 Vantage Street
Dallas, TX 75207
(214) 905-1252

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Parente is part of First Annual Art Tour and Taste presented by Capital One Bank and Fingers Furniture


Sunday, September 19, 2010, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Location: Houston Sports Museum @ Finger Furniture; Aerosol Warfare; Winter Street Gallery; Gremillion & Co Fine Art; 4411 Montrose; Colton & Farb Gallery; Private Home Collection
——————————————————————————–
Created By Houston Young People for the Arts [HYPA]
Take your Sunday brunch on the road. Leave the driving, mimosas and art to us.
Eye-popping and Tummy tempting: snacks at every stop as well as beverage service between art pit stops.
Stops include:
Houston Sports Museum – built on the site of Buff Stadium, the former home to Houston’s historic minor league baseball team, Finger Furniture has among its couches and chairs, one of the finest collection of sports memorabilia in the country. The museum is built around the original home plage which can still be seen;
Aerosol Warfare with Gonzo247 + CKC;
Winter Street Gallery – explore the studio space of urban painter Kevin Peterson as he prepares for the 39th Annual Bayou City Art Festival Downtown;
Gremillion & Co. Fine Art Gallery – tour the current exhibition, "Edge of Awakening", with featured artist Nicola Parente;
4411 Montrose – view the latest exhibitions at Barbara Davis Gallery and Wade Wilson Art.
Colton & Farb Gallery – currently on: Heart Like Flowing Water, solo exhibition by Yang Jin Long following his Crow Collection of Asian Art museum show & Affirmations: A Serios of Solo Exhibitions curated by Carolyn Farb: Lowell Boyers, Franco Mondini-Ruiz, Omar Angel Perez, Alfred Scaroina.
Omar Angel Perez will be in attendance with his exhibition “Stilett’O's”.
Historic Heights Home and Eclectic Personal Collection – enjoy the personal collection of preservation and prolific art appreciator Bart Truxillo on display at his personal residence, an 1893 Queen Anne Stick Victorian home listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The tour leaves at 1 p.m. by luxury coach bus from Finger Furniture located at 4001 Gulf Freeway and returns at 5 pm.
Guests are invited to join Bayou City Art Festival after the tour at Finger Furniture as it kicks off its Downtown Festival from 5 pm – 7 pm. Drinks and light bites included.
Thank you to our Sponsors:
PURCHASE TICKETS HERE: http://www.houstondowntownalliance.com/hypa
Individual: $50 (plus $1.80 ticket surcharge)
Couples: $75 (plus $2.54 ticket surcharge)

Next time on the Front row

Monday, September 13, 2010

Nicola Parente is Wide Awake by Maria Glymph - September 2010



Nicola Parente is Wide Awake by Maria Glymph

Nicola Parente began painting late in life but caught up and earned an international reputation before he hit 40. Armed with an MBA because that was what was expected of him – he comes from a family of entrepreneurs – Nicola started his professional career in business. Actually, as a wine importer and distributor.

Only that day dawns to which we are awake.

These are Thoreau’s words, and they have inspired Nicola’s newest body of work titled “Edge of Awakening” opening this Friday, September 10th at Gremillion & Co. Fine Art, Houston.

The work “explores neither awakening nor its opposite, but the uncertain worlds between the two where each person must choose among possibilities. Those choices, those points of decision, visited and re-visited, both discover and invent the nature of our lives.”


Flash back.

In a conversation with an old friend about regrets, Nicola pondered what he would lament with the passage of time.

“Not being an artist.”

He couldn’t come up with reasons not to jump in and try it. His friend encouraged him. The old stereotypes of starving artists living under bridges, the impossibility of success, and that it was unthinkable as a full-time existence weren’t enough to deter him. The future was his. No remorse.

Two years later, Nicola had the same conversation with the same friend. While he had been “dabbling,” he hadn’t really committed himself to his art and couldn’t shirk the responsibility of answering to ‘Why not?’

Flash forward.

Nicola is where he wants to be and where he is most comfortable: the art world.
He began by showing his work in restaurants and coffee houses about 12 years ago. His first break came shortly after when he was asked to exhibit in a gallery, and it wasn’t long before he had his first solo show.

In 2009, he participated in “Transparent/Translucent”, curated by Wade Wilson, at the Museum Gallery at the University of Texas in San Antonio. A museum show!

Not bad.

Many variables have contributed to Nicola’s success, but the one that he points to and laughs about – a strategic plan. Music to my ears.

Once Nicola had launched into painting, another of his supportive friends urged him to develop a path with clear goals. He had an MBA. He knew about this stuff. When he was at the University of St. Thomas, he used all of his projects and case studies to focus on art, but now, it didn’t seem important.

When he was awarded a grant from Creative Capital that was spearheaded by DiverseWorks, that all changed. “The first thing they said was that we each needed a strategic plan,” he laughs. “There it was again.”

Nicola says that it forced him to start putting things in writing, to articulate what he wanted from his life and his art. “Once you start putting things in writing, they come to fruition,” he continues. “You put it out there in the universe, it’s pretty amazing, you put it out there and you get a lot back.”

One of his goals: To be in a museum show within three years. It happened in two.
Nicola has participated in numerous exhibits in the United States and Italy. His relationship with Gremillion & Co. Fine Art has been incredibly rewarding, and this is his second solo exhibit at the gallery.

Nicola’s work is organic on many levels. Themes include the displacement of people, the redevelopment of communities, and the sustainability of water. His earlier works can be viewed on his website.

Of his new series, “Edge of Awakening”, Nicola says, “Art is a venture into worlds that are often only discovered in the attempt to represent them to yourself and others.”
He prefers to paint in series, “exploring multiple ways of saying not the same thing, but similar things, related things—things that are in process and could go in a multiplicity of directions. The possibility of awakening is also the possibility of remaining unawakened. Our lives are more circuitous than linear, living in more than one environment, a step forward, a step back, moving through a land with no clear boundaries whose silence we interrupt with both our words as well as our marks of paint, discovering and inventing our futures.”
The circuitous part of Nicola’s life makes him an active member of the Houston community. The world according to Nicola is not bound by his studio walls.

With Writer’s in the Schools, Nicola teaches students about art and music and helps them articulate what they see. He creates visuals of their words for discussion and also asks their opinion of his other paintings. He enjoys getting out and interacting with the students. Don’t be fooled. He smiles, “I learn so much from the students as well.”

Over the last year, Nicola has generously donated his artwork to help raise over $19,000 for non-profits and their efforts. In 2009 for example, he was the featured artist at the annual Art for Arthritis benefit and auction, which helps the Arthritis Foundation improve lives through leadership in the prevention, control, and cure of arthritis and related diseases.

He also enjoys working with other artists. In 2008, he collaborated with Dominic Walsh Dance Theater in designing and creating the set for the World Premiere of Terminus, which is being revived this season and presented on October 21 through 23 at Zilkha Hall. In 2009, Nicola and fellow artist Divya Murthy created two site-specific installations at the Art League Houston, and each November he participates in Dia do los Muertos at Lawndale Art Center.

And there’s more.

Nicola is a huge supporter of the Houston theatre and arts community. He gets out and visits galleries to support other artists and to see what they’re working on.

He admires the work of local artists Michael Arcieri and Patrick Palmer. Both also have studios at Winter Street Studios where Nicola spends time wielding his brush. The Chilean artist Roberto Matta has had a profound influence on his work, and Nicola has spent significant time studying his paintings at The Menil Collection, which has a large body of Matta’s art.

Nicola believes that music influences art, and it is a big part of his process. He’s been told that rhythm can be seen in his work. Again he smiles (he does that a lot). In his studio, you’re apt to hear everything from opera to rap. He loses himself in the sound and emerges astonished at what he’s produced on the canvas as a result.

“Once I dedicated my life and went into my studio and began painting full time, I have found the possibilities endless. Once I opened my mind to the creative side, I had all of these ideas,” he says.
Nicola’s “Edge of Awakening” exhibit will be on view at Gremillion & Co. Fine Art, Houston through October 9th.


Source: www. crawfordria.com

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Nicola Parente's Acoustic Vision at the Speed of Light by Stacey Holzer


Nicola Parente's Acoustic Vision at the Speed of Light
by Stacey Holzer

Out of observation to the larger continuum a connection to all things results from the visual acuity required to see at the speed of light. Movement and the essence of living inspires the paintings of Nicola Parente. In one word "Connection" is what drives Parente to paint. . Authentically driven by a reciprocity of living, the flow of Parente’s paintings are derived from a relevance to their surrounding environment. Intentionally concerned with movement and regentrification of the urban landscape, his paintings reflect how time passes swiftly like a rolling film projector or travelling by train seeing the landscape move in record space. As the viewer your own movement changes your point of attraction and can become a blur.

The Edge of Urban Time was a series that focused on regentrified urban areas throughout the country and the wards of Houston. Fences constructed around sites being redeveloped, people relocated in the name of urban renewal, these facts shape the landscapes of reality and his work. Monochromatic dark tones, and crosshatch transparent grids portray a glimpse of an urban jungle magnified, a hint of red is used to depict a human element. A concrete jungle remade into an urban playground. Development yields positive change yet a second look reveals the element of displacement that also occurs.

"There is meaning in every journey that is unknown to the traveler". Dietrich Bonhoeffer. This quote sets the stage for Parente’s Journey series. This body of work tears down barriers of the previous exploration of urban regentrification and reexamines the beautification of urban space. The development of Discovery Green with art, trees, and lakes was an influence. Layers of color, architectonic details, a fascination with trains and travel to Italy each year are also provocative sensations that evolve Parente’s work.

Each series organically progresses and changes within a time frame of about two years. As time passes Parente yields to an inner knowing that facilitates the entrance of a new beginning. Henry David Thoreau wrote "Only that day dawns to which we are awake" a phrase that most represents Parente’s latest work The Edge of Awakening.

Acceleration of time is a phrase you hear often in our world of ever changing complexities and it comes with a desire to return to self redefining what is important. For Parente becoming a full time artist was a way of doing just that. Imagining what his father would experience as a farmer in Italy, returning to the land as sustenance over and again. Although Nicola retains an urban aesthetic the return to authenticity is similar in feel and imagining, the results are completely of his own design.

As a contemporary artist using twenty-first century materials Parente utilizes a method of subtraction, working wet on wet, charcoal powders are reduced with brushes that reunite them. He researched various plastics at length to determine which surface would best prove ground for the images he creates. Parente says "a successful painting must create an emotional response not a positive or negative one but an echo strong enough to remember".

The creative process is stepping into a place of allowance where you are willing to be vulnerable enough to let go and allow creative expression to flow through you. Time disappearance happens when you become one with what you create. Remaining present enough to let go without much thought generates the most successful result. Parente says "Painting is a meditation remembering and resonance allow oneness with what you are doing. Losing yourself in the moment is fantastic, a transitional state of pure creativity".

Parente is currently working as one of the visiting visual artists for Writers in the Schools program (WITS). Since 2009 he has worked with over 800 students, elementary through middle school. Parente is paired with one of WITS' teaching poets to create deep arts-infused learning experiences. Students work closely with a writer/poet to create self-reflective writings of their own. Parente then guides the students in transforming their own writing into a visual art component.

Parente’s most recent project was in conjunction with the JoaquĆ­n Torres-Garcia exhibition at the Menil Collection. Students toured the collection, worked with a poet, and then created their own wood or cardboard abstraction generating symbols and writing to tell their story of arrival. Parente says "It was powerful work. I was amazed at how deep the students dug to create their poems and how high they flew to create their artwork. Seeing the immense results from this kind of collaborative work, inspires me, I now believe that the arts feed one another in unexplainable ways". Many of the kids involved in the program have little or no exposure to museums or galleries. A strong belief in giving back to the community sparked Parente’s involvement in this worthy program.

Authenticity and the caring spirit of inclusiveness are what define the expression of Nicola Parente. As his work continues to evolve it will be wonderful to see what is yet to unfold. Nicola Parente’s solo exhibition Edge of Awakening is now on view at Gremillion & Co. Fine Art through October 9th 2010.

Source: Visualseen.net