In Conversation—Paul Pfeiffer: “Still Life”

This event is free with Late Night ICP museum admission.

In celebration of Paul Pfeiffer’s large-scale photographic installation Paul Pfeiffer: Still Lifepresented by ICP in partnership with MTA Arts & Design and on view in the cultural corridor of Grand Central Madison’s new Long Island Rail Road terminal—join Pfeiffer and photographer Jason Nocito for a behind the scenes conversation centered on process and collaboration.

This program is being offered both in person at ICP, located on NYC’s Lower East Side, and online. In person tickets include entry to ICP’s galleries during Late Night ICP.

Note: Speakers, date, and time subject to change.

About the Project

Still Life pays homage to and was made in collaboration with the iconic New York City street performer “Da Gold Man,” who has appeared as a living statue on the sidewalks of Times Square for over seventeen years. Covered in gold and standing motionless on a common milk crate, Da Gold Man fascinates and enthralls passersby with his uncanny, statue-like presence.

For this project, Pfeiffer removes Da Gold Man from his usual spot on the corner of Broadway and 43rd Street and installs him within the infinite white space of a commercial advertising studio—a seamless backdrop typically used to photograph high-end jewelry, designer fashions, and other luxury products. The pictures resulting from this unlikely mixture blur the line between studio portraiture and product photography.

Still Life explores the power of art to alter our awareness of the everyday world. Like Da Gold Man, Pfeiffer’s photographs blur the line between personal identity and manufactured commodity. Their scale, detail, and alluring presentation slow down the act of seeing, revealing a being that is simultaneously human and object. Forever suspended in time, Pfeiffer invites us to view the living statue as a cipher of the contemporary moment, and to consider both what we can—and cannot—see.

Jason Nocito is a photograph living in NYC working between commercial and non commercial practices.

Born in Honolulu in 1966, Paul Pfeiffer grew up between Hawaii and the Philippines before moving to New York in 1990 to attend Hunter College and the Whitney Independent Study Program. Pfeiffer is known for his highly sophisticated use of digital technologies and new media, and has created celebrated works of video, photography, installation, and sculpture since the late 1990s. Using digital erasure, magnification, and repetition, Pfeiffer samples and retouches images or video footage from sporting events, concerts, game shows, and Hollywood films to enhance their psychological effects. By drawing attention to certain aspects of visual culture and concealing others, he underlines the spectacular nature of contemporary media and its consumption.

Pfeiffer has had one-person exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art (2001); the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (2003 and 2017-18); the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (2005); MUSAC León, Spain (2008); the Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin (2009) and Sammlung Goetz, Munich, Germany (2011). Pfeiffer has presented work in major international exhibitions in recent years, including the Performa Biennial (2019), the Honolulu Biennial (2019), the Seoul Mediacity Biennial (2022) and the Toronto Biennial (2022). His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Inhotim Museu de Arte Contemporanea, Inhotim, Brazil; the Pinault Collection, Venice; and Kunst Werke, Berlin, among others.











When: Thu., Apr. 27, 2023 at 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Where: International Center of Photography (ICP)
79 Essex St.
212-857-0000
Price: Free w/ $5 Admission
Buy tickets/get more info now
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This event is free with Late Night ICP museum admission.

In celebration of Paul Pfeiffer’s large-scale photographic installation Paul Pfeiffer: Still Lifepresented by ICP in partnership with MTA Arts & Design and on view in the cultural corridor of Grand Central Madison’s new Long Island Rail Road terminal—join Pfeiffer and photographer Jason Nocito for a behind the scenes conversation centered on process and collaboration.

This program is being offered both in person at ICP, located on NYC’s Lower East Side, and online. In person tickets include entry to ICP’s galleries during Late Night ICP.

Note: Speakers, date, and time subject to change.

About the Project

Still Life pays homage to and was made in collaboration with the iconic New York City street performer “Da Gold Man,” who has appeared as a living statue on the sidewalks of Times Square for over seventeen years. Covered in gold and standing motionless on a common milk crate, Da Gold Man fascinates and enthralls passersby with his uncanny, statue-like presence.

For this project, Pfeiffer removes Da Gold Man from his usual spot on the corner of Broadway and 43rd Street and installs him within the infinite white space of a commercial advertising studio—a seamless backdrop typically used to photograph high-end jewelry, designer fashions, and other luxury products. The pictures resulting from this unlikely mixture blur the line between studio portraiture and product photography.

Still Life explores the power of art to alter our awareness of the everyday world. Like Da Gold Man, Pfeiffer’s photographs blur the line between personal identity and manufactured commodity. Their scale, detail, and alluring presentation slow down the act of seeing, revealing a being that is simultaneously human and object. Forever suspended in time, Pfeiffer invites us to view the living statue as a cipher of the contemporary moment, and to consider both what we can—and cannot—see.

Jason Nocito is a photograph living in NYC working between commercial and non commercial practices.

Born in Honolulu in 1966, Paul Pfeiffer grew up between Hawaii and the Philippines before moving to New York in 1990 to attend Hunter College and the Whitney Independent Study Program. Pfeiffer is known for his highly sophisticated use of digital technologies and new media, and has created celebrated works of video, photography, installation, and sculpture since the late 1990s. Using digital erasure, magnification, and repetition, Pfeiffer samples and retouches images or video footage from sporting events, concerts, game shows, and Hollywood films to enhance their psychological effects. By drawing attention to certain aspects of visual culture and concealing others, he underlines the spectacular nature of contemporary media and its consumption.

Pfeiffer has had one-person exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art (2001); the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (2003 and 2017-18); the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (2005); MUSAC León, Spain (2008); the Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin (2009) and Sammlung Goetz, Munich, Germany (2011). Pfeiffer has presented work in major international exhibitions in recent years, including the Performa Biennial (2019), the Honolulu Biennial (2019), the Seoul Mediacity Biennial (2022) and the Toronto Biennial (2022). His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Inhotim Museu de Arte Contemporanea, Inhotim, Brazil; the Pinault Collection, Venice; and Kunst Werke, Berlin, among others.

Buy tickets/get more info now