Nicola  
Costantino was born in Rosario (1964) where she studied Fine Arts, 
produced and  exhibited her first works, and also learned the new 
sculpture techniques that influenced  the concept of her production; the
 molds of human and animal bodies cast from the  original that 
characterize her work.
                    
                    In 1994  with the support of Pablo Suárez, she 
attended the Barracas Workshop of  Antorchas Foundation coordinated by 
Suárez and Benedit. Shortly after moving to  Buenos Aires, she spent a 
year in Houston, Texas, in the Core Program for  Artists, where she 
began producing silicon human skin to make dresses and  lavish coats 
with human hair necks. Nicola learned design and haute couture in  her 
adolescence working with her mother in her clothes factory, which 
allowed  her to create “Peletería humana” [Human Furriery] a work of the
 finest quality.
                    
                    Since 1997,  the support of Benzacar Gallery 
facilitated her inclusion in the international  art scene through her 
participation in art fairs. The following year, she  presented her 
“Chanchobolas” [Hog-balls], an emblematic work from the animal  
sculpture line that she would continue with 
                    
                    
 
One of the artists featured in FUTURESPECTIVE 
Group show opens Feb. 14th 
Friso de nonatos” [Frieze of  Unborn Animals] in 1999 and “Animal Motion Planet” in 2004.
                    
                    “Peletería  Humana”, a window display with twenty 
mannequins dressed in Nicola’s designs,  represented Argentina at the 
Biennial of Sao Paulo in 1998, whose director was Pablo  Herkenhoff, and
 the theme “anthropophagy and cannibalism”.  This presentation led to 
several exhibitions  and international biennials, and the reproduction 
of her work a number of  catalogs. The display was also shown in the 
First Liverpool Biennial and Jeffrey  Deitch invited her to turn his 
Soho gallery into a boutique in September 2000. At  the same time, the 
selection committee of the MOMA became aware of Nicola’s  work and added
 her “Male Nipples Corset” to their collection. This was followed  by a 
show at the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes de Buenos Aires [Buenos Aires
  National Museum of Fine Arts] and a second one in the projects room of
 The Joan  Miró Foundation in Barcelona.
                    
                    In 2004,  Nicola presented “Animal Motion Planet”, a
 series of orthopedic machines for  unborn animals, consisting of 
chromed iron mechanisms powered by engines, and  she launched “Savon de 
Corps” [Body Soap] at the MALBA [Buenos Aires Museum of  Latin American 
Art], which is formed by a multiple of 100 pieces imitating an  
exclusive cosmetic product. Nicola produced this soap with 3% of fat 
from a  liposuction and created the slogan “Take a bath with me” that 
attracted media  attention. Nicola became the artist, the model and the 
prime matter of her  work.
                    
                    From  then on, Nicola’s public relevance gave sense 
to her later production. The  encounter with Gabriel Valansi in 2006 
marked her entrance in the world of  photography. In her work, she has 
combined two types of images: a series that  refers to important works 
in the history of photography and art, and others  that crisscross some 
element of her imaginary and her identity as an artist. The  constant is
 her role as leading character representing different personalities,  
glamorous and feminine, hard worker, maternal, intimidating. In this 
last  production, marked by her maternity, she adds the value of her 
experience a
 Opening: Thursday, Feb. 14th 2013
 
 
Works by: 
 George Sanchez-Calderon
 Christopher Carter
 Nicola Costantino
 Johnny Robles
 Kiki Valdes
 Jel Martinez
 Constanza Piaggio 
 David Marsh
 JeanPaul Mallozzi
 Ruben Ubiera
 Florencia Rodríguez Giles