Audio By Carbonatix
When you’re visiting the average gelato joint, the most provocative thing you might expect to encounter is a scoop of jalapeño chocolate, blackberry Cabernet, or rambunctious rhubarb crème fraîche to spice up the vanilla. But at the Gelato Station Gallery, a dose of controversy seems the flavor du jour.
Frenchman Guy Le Houx has converted a room in the back of his frozen-treat boutique into an alternative space for local artists to shop their wares and customers to bone up on culture. “I had a space and wanted to promote local artists and this show, featuring paintings by a serious artist; seemed like it would be interesting to the public,” he gushes. Hyped as the “Freedom of Speech Tour: Censored Artwork in Post 9/11 America,” Victor-Hugo Vaca unfurls fifteen of his poke-you-in-the-eye confections, including paintings from his World Trade Center Tribute, The American Tragedy, and Freedom of Speech series. “Some of these paintings were part of a Hurricane Wilma installation damaged by debris someone heaped on them because of their political nature,” Vaca fumes, adding the work is scheduled to go on tour to promote political awareness.
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