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Corvaia's Human Factor

Mon May 12, 2008 at 12:04:10 PM
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Jose D. Duran

Walking down Lincoln Road not too long ago, I overheard a snooty conversation about art. A man and a woman carrying shopping bags stood in front of a gallery with their heads titled to the side, like a couple of trendy philosophers.

“Installations,” the woman said through her nose. “These are the hottest thing in art right now.”

I’ll bet you my tiny New Times paycheck they weren’t from Miami. Take Saturday night’s Wynwood art walk for proof. The walk was a chance to see everything from mixed media crochet to abstract video shorts. But one thing - thank God - was missing: artsy pretentiousness.

No name dropping. No noses in the air. In the small, overlooked Miami art scene, there seems to be more comradery than competition. The whole thing was much less hoity-toity than I expected.

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Jose D. Duran

Which brings me to Jo Jo Corvaia’s “The Human Factor,” showing through June 10 at In-Dependant on Northwest 22nd Street. The Venezuelan artist has a simple, straight forward concept.

Three of the gallery walls are filled with portraits of people with different ages, nationalities, races and religions. The photos are all taken using the same pose and lighting - just a clean shot of the face and his or her bare shoulders.

Next to the photos, Corvaia hung a sheet of questions person had answered. The questions, meant to be vague and universal, are along the lines of, “What is happiness?” and “What’s your statement of belief?”

There’s something really personal about reading the responses - in each person’s own distinct handwriting - and then looking right into a close-up of his or her face. A middle-aged Jamaican woman wrote happiness is “a full belly.” A man next to her scribbled happiness is “distraction.”

The exhibit sparked a lot of good conversation, at least on Saturday. It’s worth checking out.

- Natalie O'Neill

Category: Culture

9 Comments:

Richard Milstein says:

JoJo's installation is a simple statement to the world -- we are all one family with the same fears and loves and worries. We are universally one. It is a brilliant exhibit!

Richard Milstein says:

JoJo's installation is a simple statement to the world -- we are all one family with the same fears and loves and worries. We are universally one. It is a brilliant exhibit!

Richard Milstein says:

JoJo's installation is a simple statement to the world -- we are all one family with the same fears and loves and worries. We are universally one. It is a brilliant exhibit!

johnny rocco says:

if there where a human equation for the human factor, JoJo Corvaia would be the solution!
if there where ever a man who could capture the pure essence of another human being through a photograph and questioneire...it is one, JoJo Corvaia...
having been at the shows opening, and meeting many of the people photographed in JoJo's show, i will be forever impressed by his ability to dive into another human beings aura and capture the very core of their existance...
the show is a "must see" and is in fact most moving when you see and read JoJo's own personal photograph, questioneire and overture!

Nisi Berryman says:

I loved Jojo's show because it so beautifully shows us all devoid of our usual trappings and markers, just the essence,
just our humanity.

robert Johnson says:

Jojo Corvaia's show is really interesting from a couple of different perspectives. First, there is the point of the universality of our human experience, regardless of ethnicity, color, or creed. Jojo captures this very well, and it's a message that is worth repeating over and over. It is the universal of our human links.

Second, there is an interesting technical photographic note. All of this work was done with an old camera that takes huge negative plates -- I think they are all 8x11 or so. Big. And from a technical perspective, it's fascinating to see the work that Jojo has done with this camera in such a narrow depth of field. And it is fascinating to see the result of such work when very large prints are made from these negatives.

Robert Johnson says:

Jojo Corvaia's show is really interesting from a couple of different perspectives. First, there is the point of the universality of our human experience, regardless of ethnicity, color, or creed. Jojo captures this very well, and it's a message that is worth repeating over and over. It is the universal of our human links.

Second, there is an interesting technical photographic note. All of this work was done with an old camera that takes huge negative plates -- I think they are all 8x11 or so. Big. And from a technical perspective, it's fascinating to see the work that Jojo has done with this camera in such a narrow depth of field. And it is fascinating to see the result of such work when very large prints are made from these negatives.

Karen Sorota says:

Jo Jo Corvaia's exhibit takes a fabric of nature and sews it together in a "humane" form. This exhibit was strung together by world of mouth, all sizes, shapes and color of people with their own individual spirits are reflected in the "sameness" of the shots. This is a real exhibit.

This is a show that you don't want to miss. Extremely special, Jojo has simplified the understanding of being Human so that we can all step back and understand our purpose once again. Very moving. A show all will enjoy.

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