Artist Registry


The White Columns Curated Artist Registry is an online platform for emerging and under-recognized artists to share images and information about their respective practices. The Registry seeks to create a context for artists who have yet to benefit from wider critical, curatorial or commercial support. To be eligible, artists cannot be affiliated with a commercial gallery in New York City.




To apply to the Registry, click here. Join our mailing list here to receive our open call announcement and other programming updates. For any further questions about the Registry, please contact us at registry@whitecolumns.org.

a → d e → h i → l m → p q → t u → x y → z


Francesco Igory Deiana
BROOKLYN NY US
Updated: 2022-12-24 10:38:53

STATEMENT OF WORK

Deiana’s recent work explores the translation of form between digital and analog worlds. The pieces are highly detailed, labor-intensive drawings and paintings and altered found-object sculptures that create a conceptual illusion of three-dimensional renderings that stem from his geometric two-dimensional work.

In his drawings, he employs more convoluted framing devices to reflect a different aspect of digital media’s malleability: the tendency of arbitrary shapes to endlessly replicate themselves within relatively narrow parameters. In these, he inscribes an abstract texture that can be described as resembling fabric viewed through TV static. This is framed within an outline built of right angles alternating with semi- circular cut outs and overlaid with tightly spaced, thin-ruled pencil markings.

The result is a fundamental tension between the geometric and painterly, the planar and the abstract, soft and hard, noise and information, space and flatness. The transcribed shapes are an evolution of his designs. Every shape is different and sometimes call to mind references to architecture, as many of his drawings also function as maquette for potential sculptures. Deiana’s can envision them as huge metal cutouts. The influence from architecture is a central tenet of his work, stemming from Deiana’s childhood in Italy where He was surrounded by the tension between the historic and the progressive change that architecture renders upon the visual landscape.

Pathos and absurdity accompany the herculean and obsessive lengths to which he will go to replicate a small bit of digital distortion, yet this gesture is firmly grounded in the history of drawing from a model. These recent drawings offer the viewer a commentary on the way in which our increasing dependence on the computer and its simulacra has eclipsed the primacy of human relationships.