ANDRÉ SARAIVA ANDRÉPOLIS

Deitch, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 40 x 30 inches

Henrietta, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 40 x 30 inches

Blue Empire, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

The Absolut Club, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, neon, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

Blue Vanity, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, neon, mirror, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

Heresy, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 40 x 30 inches

A for Andy, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 40 x 30 inches

The Night Building, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, neon, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

The Sex Building, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

Pink Empire, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, mixed media, 90 x 40 x 30 inches

Pink Vanity, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, neon, mirror, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

The Hole, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, neon, mixed media, 90 x 40 x 30 inches

Annabelle, 2012, wood, enamel, electronics, neon, mixed media, 90 x 30 x 30 inches

The Hole is proud to announce the first major solo show by André Saraiva, Andrépolis, where, as the title suggests, the artist will be making a miniature city installation in Gallery 3. Building fifteen wooden, painted, and fully lighted buildings, the rear gallery will be transformed into a city at night, with miniature neons lighting up his recreations of a hallucinatory vision of New York nightclubs and restaurants. His arted version of the city will create the scene for which artists and culture makers come together, while the sister show in Gallery 1 and 2 features portraits of over 100 of the artists that make up the art scene here.

Olivier Zahm, Purple Magazine:

This exhibition, Andrépolis, is not only the most important exhibition that André has ever done in the United States, it is in fact the ultimate realization of his vision and of his artistic universe.

The exhibition is an installation of fifteen monumental sculptures, forming an urban landscape composed of stylized New York skyscrapers. It evokes giant toys, a theme park, or perhaps miniature maquettes of nightclubs with their ever so discreet, well-guarded doors, their nocturnal, informational neons … Once again André is creating clubs, but this time they aren’t in a city, they’re in a gallery. With this good-natured gesture, he reminds everyone that if he did contribute to the night scene with his clubs— which he continues to do — it is as an artist, and without ever giving up his vocation, which renders clear everything he does.

The urban phantasmagoria of Andrépolis is indeed child-like, but it is also as eroticized as the streets of Pigalle and as idealized as a drawing in a metaphysical comic book, linking Paris and New York, André’s two favorite cities. The one from which he came and the one where he met the woman he loves. Andrépolis is also a link between the world of children (building games, comic books) and the art world (the artist graffiti he came from, the city according to Matt Mullican or the work of Mike Kelley). This is his strength, being able to pass from one world to another, from the world of children’s games to the contemporary arts scene. And to be able to connect so easily to everyone, children, adolescents, the art world; only a few artists who came out of graffiti have succeeded this way. I think Keith Haring, one of his heroes, incredibly creative, generous, embodying the accessibility of contemporary art, the artist connecting with people in the street – and we must add Little Nemo …

This exhibition synthesizes André’s artistic journey and his daily obsessions: the graffiti of Mr. A, drawn wherever he goes, love graffiti for each new love, and Mickey with his erection (“I have a Mickey Mouse/ a real club in his house. And if you shake him he goes off…” as Serge Gainsbourg used to sing, rather more pornographically in French), which André remade for the occasion, the silver exhibition. Ironically, these sculptures of nightclubs also link to his activity as a creator of clubs. Each of these sculptures is an altar to the passions in his life: partying, the night, and the irresistible attraction of the lights in the bars and the clubs of the city he is exploring.

And the exhibition has a surprise at the end, a carousel for adults, for those who are not afraid to ride the wings of desire… the way André does in Andrépolis.

Bowery

312 Bowery
New York City, NY 10012

+1 212 466 1100

Tribeca

86 Walker St.
New York City, NY 10013

+1 212 343 3100

Los Angeles

844 N La Brea Ave.
Los Angeles, CA 90038

+1 323 297 3288