INSECT / MAMMAL – Abel Alejandre & Paul Paiement
INSECT / MAMMAL - Abel Alejandre & Paul Paiement
Sep 8
5:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Coagula Curatorial
974 Chung King Road, Los Angeles CA 90012


Coagula Curatorial is pleased to present INSECT / MAMMAL, a two-artist exhibit of new distinct bodies of work by Abel Alejandre & Paul Paiement. The show runs Saturday September 8 thru Saturday October 13, with an artist reception held on Saturday September 8 from 5-9 PM. Coagula Curatorial is located at 974 Chung King Road in the historic Chinatown district of Downtown Los Angeles.

The gallery hours are Thursday – Saturday, 1-6 PM, & by appointment.

Abel Alejandre frequently explores the public and private spheres of masculinity, and while observing male codes of conduct through the men in his life, often makes use of the rooster as the central allegorical image. As he interprets this beautiful, regal, fierce, and common, creature, the artist highlights the similarities in how some men embody these qualities; its aim is to convince an opponent of its wisdom and prescience.

In his latest series, Constructed Monsters, Alejandre steps further into the animal side to depict the man who resists change. This man may respond with anger, frustration, indignity, and/or confusion. Constructed Monsters straddle the line between right and wrong.

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Hybrids CS (ceramic sculpture) are the latest in Paul Paiement’s Hybrids series. The conceptual premise of this series is based on Max Wertheimer’s theories of visual perception and Gestalt psychology. At its core, this theory explores the boundaries between what we believe to be factual and what is fictitious.

Paiement’s ceramics morph technological gadgets into insect shapes. At first glance they appear as representations of insect specimen. Upon further inspection, the viewer discovers that they are actually techno gadgets posing as bugs. Molds of hand-held techno devices such as Bluetooth speakers, Gameboy controllers and vibrators used for sexual gratification, are just some of the found objects used as a base for the finished sculpture. The gadgets are then cast in clay and porcelain. Using acrylic, Paiement transforms the gadgets by painting them to resemble various insect forms such as beetles, wasps, moths and butterflies. Paiement uses the co-mingling of nature (insect) and technology (man made) to express the notion that mankind (including his creations) are not distinct from nature, but are nature. These little hybrid creatures suggest what will happen when mankind creates beings that are more intelligent, physically fit, and self-aware than their creators.


974 Chung King Road, Los Angeles CA 90012

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