Paul Insect's refined interpretation of visceral subject matter has thrust him towards fame in the past year, with a noted collector absorbing his entire "Bullion" exhibition. Paul's work has evolved considerably: Victorian graphics have been replaced by Dada-ist collages fusing adolescence, aggression, and rough- around- more- than- just- the-e dges pornography. These motifs are tempered by a joyous use of color and an ambitious style. Equally, the images are provoking and provocative: dripping as much with sensitivity and gravitas as they are with sex and death. Moreover, they are a window onto the mind of the frustrated modern male: boiling over with unkempt aggression and sexuality, but yearning somehow for a higher moral purpose than the gradual accumulation of acceptance. Clowns crack and go on the rampage; kids in cowboy outfits contemplate the worth of their peers; and babies are contented to consider the consequences of the quantum age. Hardcover, color.
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