John Procario

Page 1

JOHN

PROCARIO
John Procario (pictured right) with his team, crating a monumental 35 feet Freeform Sculpture

Copyright © 2022 Todd Merrill

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Todd Merrill & Associates, Inc. 80 Lafayette Street New York, NY 10013 www.toddmerrillstudio.com

Printed in the United States of America

Procario, John. John Procario / Todd Merrill.

1. artist — monograph.

Catalog Design: Dallas Dunn Photography: Simon Leung

John Procario

Todd Merrill

Self published by Lightning Press Totowa, NJ

Introduction

John Procario has a vision for creating forms composed of hand carved wood and a travelling line of light. Each work is drawn floating in space, and presents itself as a unique form that seems to change as the viewer walks around it. This is a mark of great sculpture, minimal yet changing, encouraging the observer to keep looking and to continue the interaction. John himself is humble and confident, with a strong body and flexible mind. His work is very much an expression of self.

When I first met John he was laying on the floor under a table in my gallery - he was obsessively interested in wood in any form and all techniques for making. Being brought up in a woodworking shop by his carpenter father, this obsession is in his DNA. As a young artist the simple complexity of his forms is surprising. Though his embracing of LED light as an inspiration and a material in the use of sculpture is very much in sync with his generation.

Procario’s sculptural lighting is composed of micro-laminated, cold-pressed bent wood. His process begins by twisting ribbons of paper to explore potential forms and lines of light. However, rather than using these models to control the wood’s shape, he allows the wood some freedom to form the sculpture. The final result is blade carved by hand. The artistic process becomes a collaboration between the artist’s respective vision and the wood’s nature.

The understated elegance of John’s work sits well in a glass and steel architectural masterpiece or a humble beach side cottage. It’s universally appealing the basic materials of simple Ash or Walnut combined with natural linen as a soft diffuser for the futuristic LEDs create a universal appeal. It is work that is totally of the 21st century with timeless aura of elemental simplicity that is always chic.

Courtesy of Workshop/APD

Procario pushes the limit of breakage to create a sense of strain in the otherwise fluid gestures of his wooden works.

Conceptually, this allows beauty to be the product of stress.

Freeform Series I

2016 22 H x 84 W x 36 D Inches

Oak, natural oil, LEDs

Freeform XI 2019 32H x 96W x 25D Inches Bleached ash wood, wax top coat, LEDs
Courtesy of De La Torre Design Studio

Freeform

Series XII 2018 20 H x 72 W x 32 D inches White oak, Diluted iron oxide, Wax top coat, LEDs

Freeform Series VII

2018 24 H x 60 W x 60 D inches White oak, dark grey finish, wax, LEDs
Freeform II 2017 32H x 27W x 113D Inches Ash wood, white oil, LEDs
Courtesy of Stelle Lomont Rouhani Architects
Freeform XXXIII 2021 50H x 72W x 40D inches White oak with black stain, LEDs
Freeform IV 2017 26H x 30W x 68D Inches Ash wood, bronze-resin coating, LEDs

John Procario’s Freeform Series is available by commission in sizes ranging from intimate to monumental. As a sculptural objects Procario’s works can provide a dynamic focal point to an interior. Scaled to a monumental size the works can act as an architectural element, helping dictate and define a space.

(Pictured) Procario‘s Monumental Freeform is now installed in the lobby of the Kaufman Orginization’s Nelson Tower at 450 7th Avenue, in New York City. This incredible hand-made, wood and LED interlocking sculpture measures an impressive 35 feet, spanning the length of the lobby. The first of its kind, Procario‘s sculpture is an impressive feat of technology and design. The building’s lobby was exquisitely designed by Design Republic

Monumental Freeform

Wood doesn’t always want to work with you when you are freeform bending so you have to work with it. I really enjoy that. Sometimes it takes you in new directions that would never have happened if everything was planned out.

Freeform Series VIII 2018 35 H x 94 W x 26 D inches Bleached ash wood, natural oil, LEDs
Vertical Freeform I 2017 75H x 30W x 24D Inches White oak, wax, LEDs
Freeform Series Light Sculpture XVI 2019 83H x 109W x 28D inches Bleached ash wood, wax top coat, LEDs
Standing Freeform V 2021 Bleached Ash, LEDs 93H x 37W x 16D inches

Crevasse Series

I 2018 21H x 91W x 26D inches Bleached ash wood, gesso, LEDs

Crevasse Series III

2019 21H x 91W x 26D inches Ash wood, black stain, black oil, LEDs

John Procario’s torqued, vessel-shaped Basin Series engages the viewer both physically and psychologically by synthesizing conceptual art, minimalism, and contemporary design.

The enthralling scale of the work appearing to levitate weightlessly, either in the air or on the wall, in harmony with the central aura of light reflected in the warmth of the wood, has the captivating effect of drawing the viewer in. Much like the works of Richard Serra and Anish Kapoor, Procario’s commanding sculptures create emotional impact through sensation and observation.

As with his popular Freeform Series that uses the act of placing stress on wood to achieve an incredible fluidity, the Basin Series achieves emotional resonance through an equally masterful manipulation of wood, transcending the material’s inherent confines.

Basin Series I

2019

72H x 30W x 42D inches

Bleached ash wood, LEDs

Basin Series Wall Light I

2019 80H x 29W x 18D in Bleached ash, white oil, gesso, and LEDs

The elegance of Procario’s Freeform Series is translated in his bentwood

Posterior Bench through the artist’s enduring focus on the natural beauty of his chosen material and the deliberate pressure used to exploit its inherent tensibility. As in previous works, the Posterior Bench similarly uses wood to create a visual metaphor for the human body, in this case the gentle curve of a body’s lower back. Self-supported and streamlined, Procario’s design reinforces his sophisticated aesthetic of organic sculptural works.

Posterior Bench

2019

Bleached ash, with white oil and

18.5H x 89W x 28.5D Inches
gesso

Basin Series Lounge Chair

2019 Ash 40H x 84W x 26.50D inches
Basin Series Standing Bowl 2022 Ash wood, black stain, black oil

TODD MERRILL IN CONVERSATION WITH JOHN PROCARIO

Todd Merrill What inspires your “Free Form” LED and wood sculpture?

John Procario I’m interested in the quality of a line and the movement of a line in space. A line in space is so different than a line on paper.

LED is the inspiration for the shape. Wood and linen combine to create a line in space that is soft and flexible - it presents an unexpected use of material - wood, the linen then diffuses the light in an ideal proportion to the sculpture.

TM Where did this all start?

JP Dad was a builder and I was always building and working in wood. I was obsessed with drawing and began as a drawing major at SUNY Purchase in upstate New York. I switched to sculpture when I found the drawing to be limiting. I took a course in woodworking and that, combined with my focus on sculpture, caused everything to change. I became interested in minimalism and the principal that a sculpture changes from every vantage point as the viewer interacts with it. Brancusi was an influence, especially the Brancusi pedestals which I found to be as important as his sculpture.

TM How did you develope your technique for creating the Freeforms and Luminaires?

JP The technique for making the Freeform and Luminaire lights was largely self-taught. There is currently no manual, book, or course to teach this method of creating “bent” wood forms. For six years, I experimented with every possible way to bend wood - steam, heat, water and then dry, cold, and finally with the wood cut into layers of micro-thin pieces. This method worked the best.

The LED and wood together create defined lines that float with a malleable transient quality from one side to the other. There is a purposeful spacial ambiguity, apparently simple, but complicated enough that the viewer does not get it all in one look. My intention is to surprise and draw the viewer in to the piece.

TM Your work is unique and signature. How do you see it evolving?

JP Recently my ambition has centered around freedom of scale to create a large size work that has a physical impact on the viewer and encourages interaction. My newest work is focused on vertical as well as horizontal pieces and two forms or lines interacting but not meeting. The ultimate expression for me will be in an outdoor setting using wood and LED in a large scale format to create mesmerizing forms that beg interaction and contemplation from the viewer.

Terraqueous Wall Light Sculpture II

2022

Bleached ash with white oil,

Terraqueous Wall Light Sculpture I

2022

Ash, black stain with black oil, LEDs

x 14W

LED’s 14H x 40W x 4D inches
38H
x 5D in
Courtesy of steve + filip design
Luminaire II 2017 10H x 22W x 16D Inches Walnut, textured brass and resin coating, LEDs

Todd Merrill Studio

For over fifteen years, Todd Merrill Studio has exhibited and purveyed the finest selection of post-war American studio furniture. In 2008, Rizzoli published Merrill’s “Modern Americana: Studio Furniture from High Craft to High Glam”, the first ever authoritative examination of the great studio furniture makers and designers who, from 1940 thru the 1990s defined American high style. To celebrate the tenth anniversary, Rizzoli published an expanded edition in 2018, adding 60 pages to his original book. This survey of the period included two additional chapters highlighting the importance of Women Makers and Showrooms.

In 2009, shortly after the initial publication of “Modern Americana”, Merrill launched Studio Contemporary, in an effort to develop and represent the work of an international group of established and emerging contemporary artists. Today, their work is sought after by a wide range of art and design patrons, from collectors and decorators, to curators and museum academics.

While their work may be functional or historically based, each artist brings a fresh perspective and a desire to express more than just decorative influence. With an ever growing range of mediums--from textile to porcelain, to marble and LEDs--their joint curation at Studio Contemporary relies upon their shared drive to push those materials to their absolute aesthetic limits. The

result: dynamic, handmade, and unique pieces that contribute to today’s increasingly relevant “grey space” between art and design.

The gallery has progressively cultivated and established new artists, placing their work into private and public collections which include The Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum (New York), The Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), The Museum of Art and Design (New York), The Victoria and Albert Museum (London), Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris), The High Museum of Art (Atlanta), and The Brooklyn Museum (New York), and the Carnegie Museum of Art (Pennsylvania), amongst others.

The gallery exhibits throughout the year at some of the leading art and design fairs in the world. A selection of these includes The Salon Art + Design (New York);  Design Miami (Basel, Switzerland and Miami); FOG: Design + Art (San Francisco); the Pavilion of Arts and Design (New York, Paris, Geneva, and London); Collectible (Brussels); Masterpiece (London); Collect (London); Gallery Seoul (Seoul); The International Fine Art & Antiques Dealer Show (New York); Zona MACO (Mexico City); Tajan (Paris); Design Days Dubai (Dubai); Art Wynwood (Miami); Art Toronto (Toronto)

Todd Merrill

STUDIO

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