
- Alex and Alexis, photographs, Kevin McWilliams, dirt is dirt at Paradigm Gallery
Dan Haddigan explains, “Dirt is dirt is basically an on-line art magazine, eventually we want to make it into a quarterly, but for right now we have interviews with artists. It’s kind of like blog format, we have different columns and the thing about it is it’s online submissions based. So anybody can submit work, we’re not just Philadelphia artists, we’re all over. Dirt is dirt is kind of hard to explain. Me and Kevin have been friends since college and it’s kind of an inside joke like, “what it is, is what it is“, that’s kind of the way I work and Kevin does, as well. It is what it is. ”
Kevin McWilliams says, “When we started this magazine we were just finishing up college and we realized the art world is very competitive, no holds barred tough place…so around our senior year we came up with this idea of an online magazine and gallery, not only for ourselves but for our peers. We want to bridge the gap, that’s the biggest thing.”

- Untitled Number Something, Dan Haddigan, dirt is dirt at Paradigm Gallery
“It’s actually all paint, it’s just done to look like wheat paste; it’s paint and acrylic transfer on wood.” Dan Haddigan, Untitled Number Something, dirt is dirt at Paradigm Studio and Gallery . “This is definitely more of a found object piece.” Haddigan says of Untitled Little Angel, “I feel like everything I do, even my original pieces come from everything…I get most of my ideas just by looking at things and then processing them and then out-putting them in my own kind of way. A lot of times I feel like the best things I make aren’t like created, they’re discovered. You know? I don’t just find things and reproduce them in the studio, it’s like an intellectual process. I’ll pull certain things out, add things to it, try to accentuate things.” What about the Black Jesus? “I know it’s kind of a loaded topic but this is personal not because of the subject matter but where the objects came from, the frame I found at work, I work in an art gallery, and the little sculptural pieces are from a rest stop in South Carolina.”

- Untitled Little Angel, Dan Haddigan, dirt is dirt at Paradigm Gallery

- Untitled (Philadelphia) 57, Steven Alvarez, dirt is dirt at Paradigm Gallery
Steven Alvarez, Untitled (Philadelphia) 57, photograph at Paradigm Gallery, “All the bags were found on the streets of Philadelphia. Mostly in Pennsport, right around near where I live. It makes me uncomfortable, a little bit, the idea that that’s what’s associated with my neighborhood.” The philatelic plastic bags designed for stamp collectors litter the artist’s neighborhood. “I just realized that more and more it’s something that I’ve seen in the city and I’ve tried to remove myself from it these days and not look for them as much. But, I still find myself with my head down looking at the ground.” Steven Alvarez scans the found objects with a high resolution scanner so he can make the images as heroically scaled as he wants. “The detail of the residue in the bag in Blueberry is amazing, it’s an interesting composition considering it’s designer drugs.” Gallery 339‘s Martin McNamara commented, “They’re very graphic, it’s an interesting idea behind them, visually they’re really striking.”

- Object Number 32, Stephanie Fuoco, dirt is dirt at Paradigm Gallery
Stephanie Fuoco says, “All my pieces relate to natural organisms and work with things that are sort of living and decaying at the same time. I make up mock-ups and let the material talk for itself. This piece I rusted the inside of the armature, then I dipped it in plaster and then I dipped cotton in plaster and then dipped it again in a resin. Which allowed the rusting to come out more intensely.”
Paradigm Studio and Gallery , 2020 South Street, Philadelphia, Pa, 19146 is hosting dirt is dirt through 1/21/2012.
Read more about Paradigm Gallery by DoN Brewer.
DoN Brewer, Contributing Writer, Side Arts
Photographs by DoN Brewer
Kodak Digital Cameras