Double Half: MOMO | Delimbo Madrid

2 February - 30 March 2019
Installation Views
Overview

MOMO is an American artist who began his experimental outdoor work in the late 90s, working with homemade tools and borrowed public space. Ten years of free ranging projects, centered around adapted masonry techniques, strategies based on collage, computer code, and seriality, came to form the basis of his visual language.

 

This language finds it's expression in paint, on commissioned walls and studio work from 2009 to the present day. Notable mural commissions include those from Facebook, Pepsi, the NFL, the World Trade Center, John Hancock Tower, Art Production Fund NY, European Capital of Culture, the NYC DOT, and Yohji Yamamoto's Y-3. However, self organized walls in Jamaica, Sicily, and Arizona (2013, 2016, 2018), painted at the artists expense, have been important in demonstrating innovative techniques for a general audience free of the usual commercial concerns.

 

In 2016 Maya Hayuk, MOMO, Swoon, and Faile inaugurated the new Millennium Iconoclast Museum of Art in Brussels, with installations on five floors. Solo shows the following year 2017 were held at Delimbo Gallery in Sevilla and Alice Gallery in Belgium, with an experimental group show of Mark Flood, Revok, Paul Kremer, and MOMO at Library Street Collective in Detroit.

 

MOMO’s unique geometrical aesthetic "blurs the line between the analog and the digital, between precision and the practical", as said by Rafael Schacter, anthropologist, curator (including the iconic show Street-Art at the Tate Modern) and author from London. Using both his studio and public production as tool of continuous experimentation, "as a continuous feedback loop for one another", MOMO has "created a perfectly imperfect form of image making, one exploring the infinite possibilities of composition and colour".

 

Supported by Clorofila Digital, La quinta vendimia

Works