Frederieke Taylor gallery is pleased to present its third one person
show with Franco Mondini-Ruiz, opening on Friday, April 4th. Well known
for his over-the-top sculptural vignettes and multitude of paintings,
small and large, the Tejano artist will present a vast array of new
objects in all sizes and formats.
A true, non-stop feast of visual and conceptual delights will await
the visitor to Mondini-Ruiz's exhibit/art buffet, consisting of a
collection of new sculptures, porcelains, art world piñatas, and
paintings in all sizes. He will offer an ever-changing array of art
goodies ranging in price from $10.00 to $10,000.00, ensuring no one
goes away hungry. The artist will be on the premises throughout the
show serving art, conversation, and strategies for a utopic, better
world of feast without famine. The performance aspect of the show
continues the tradition of the "botanica" established by the artist in
San Antonio in the mid-nineties, and the Infinito Botanica, the stand
in front of the Whitney Museum where he sold small objects and
knick-knacks as part of his participation in the 2000 Whitney Biennial.
Franco Mondini-Ruiz was named one of the "25 Movers and Shakers" in
ArtNews. His work has been featured in numerous museums and
international shows and he has been awarded many prestigious grants and
prizes. Recent exhibitions include the Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ in
2008, the Neuberger Museum, Purchase, NY, 2007, the Museo Alameda, San Antonio 2007, the Prague Biennial 2005, "Botanica Los Angeles" at UCLA Fowler Museum 2004, Marfa Ballroom, Marfa, Texas 2004, "Ultrabaroque"
in 2002, and the Whitney Biennial 2000. Franco Mondini-Ruiz is part of
"Re-Mix", an exhibition in June 2008 at the National Museum of the
American Indian in New York.
Some of the grants awarded to the artist have been the Rome Prize
2004, the Creative Capital Grant 2002, 2001, the Joan Mitchell Grant
2001, the Pollock-Krasner Grant 2000, and Art Pace Grant 1999. In 2006,
D.A.P. published his book "High Pink",
available at the gallery, where Mondini-Ruiz mixes personal narratives
with images of the sculptures that were featured in his first solo show
with the gallery in 2002. The artist lives and works in New York and
San Antonio, Texas.