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The museum’s West Gallery will feature
Nickel Bags, an installation by New York- based artist David
Shapiro. Nickel Bags is an ongoing project centered on a simple
action—everyday, for the last ten years, Shapiro has picked
up three things off the street. Each plucked piece is sealed
in a tiny plastic bag and pinned to the wall forming a grid of
thousands of disjointed scraps. A plastic toy, a lollipop wrapper,
a lipstick smeared cigarette butt, teeth marks on a piece of
gum—Shapiro claims them all. Together they form a colorful
and expansive mosaic of discarded consumption. Shapiro sees these
vestiges of stranger’s lives as “points of departure
for reconstructing narratives and speculating on motives,” where,
like a jigsaw puzzle in reverse, “the picture is fit to
the pieces”.
Shapiro’s recent solo exhibitions include 100,000 Holes
in 2002 and Control Freak in 1999, both at LiebmanMagnan, New
York. In addition to numerous group shows, in 2000 he exhibited
Nickel Bags, in a solo show at Lavanderia Fundacion in Barcelona.
A University at Albany graduate with a B.A. in English, Shapiro
is also the director, writer, and producer of the award-winning
documentary film, Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal
Tale.
Click here to view the installation shots
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