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NEVER BEFORE EVER AGAIN NATHALEE PAOLINELLI Saturday, September 18th // Closing Reception // 7pm - 11pm August 27th to September 18th 2010 Nathalee Paolinelli exhibits new paintings, sculptures and an installation in the front window. Paolinelli’s works address formal systems within abstraction interpreting and reconfiguring them through a whimsical mode of discovery. These diverse pieces employ a palette of saturated hues that result in a dynamic arrangement of shapes and forms for the viewer to engage. Nathalee Paolinelli. Born in Prince Rupert BC. Living and teaching in Vancouver BC. Graduated from Emily Carr (BFA) in 2004. 35 Dots - Composition One in Twenty, Acrylic paint and gouache on wood Left: Composition Ten, Gouache on Arches paper Right: Lallygag, Acrylic and plaster on wood Left: All About Ever, Gouache on linen Right: Ruin, Gouache on linen Too the Good, Gouache on linen Installation Shot Youth, Acrylic paint and plaster on wood Youth, Acrylic paint and plaster on wood + On Plinth: Porthole, Acrylic paint and plaster on wood 304 Days speaks with Nathalee Paolinelli about her exhibition via a few questions posed through email. 304 Days: Your works suggest a playful approach to abstraction whereby you make paintings and sculptures in an intuitive mode and then experiment with configuration and display post-fabrication. How does this process inform your practice? NP: I’m only working this way with the oval piece, Composition One in Twenty, displayed in the front window. This process of recomposing a piece is playful but more than that it helps me establish a composition, I figure its much faster than making a painted study and slower than using the computer. 304 Days: The ‘sticks’ and the thick paintings in the back room of the exhibition have a heavy application of paint and the works in the front room and the window are flat. How did these different factures of paint arise? NP: I’m working on several different works at once, that way I never have the feeling of “here we go again” I have different ways of working some loose and fast and others more drawn out and meticulous. 304 Days: All of the works in this exhibition have a similar palette of mostly saturated hues. How did you come to this palette selection? NP: I don’t choose a palette before I start it comes as I go. I’m using colours I like. I don’t buy colours I don’t like.