Coom Barooom
Coom Barooom
About the project
At Beach 44 St, artist Jill Parisi used the scale allowed by walls of glass block to create imaginary sea creatures. They appear to float on the glass in resplendent colors and intricate patterns. These hybrid species are inspired by an unusual marine anomaly nearby, where the Gulf Stream carries various tropical fish to the region. Parisi referenced botanical cross-sections, jellyfish, stingrays, and triggerfish, in order to create the original works on paper that were later translated into the glass medium. These over-scaled and overlapping shapes, and the play of sunlight on the glass, create the sensation that you are looking underwater.
The subject matter is appropriate for a station that is situated in front of the ocean, in an area discussed as a future marine preserve. The strong sunlight that reaches the southbound mezzanine fills the station as light is refracted through the glass blocks, causing the entire wall to glow. In the evening the wall is illuminated from within, providing an outdoor view of the artwork. Parisi titled the work after a passage from William Carlos Williams’ prose poem, “The Sea,” which contains many playful singsong lines including "oom barrooom," which mimics the sound of crashing waves.
Parisi works mostly with handmade paper, using drawing and printmaking to create large-scale installations and small sculptures. Many of her prints and drawings are delicate hand painted works inspired by organic forms. In commenting on the experience of creating this work, she said, “I am very interested in creating a feeling of lightness and beauty for the viewer. I have also wanted to work in a more permanent medium for some time, and as a result of this project I have realized that glass in very fitting for my work. It interacts beautifully with architecture and nature."
About the artist
Jill Parisi is an avid hiker and traveler living and working in New York’s Catskill Mountain area. Her work has been exhibited internationally and is in various private and public collections. She has received commissions and numerous awards including a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Printmaking/Drawing/Artists’ Books. Parisi’s work has been selected for several International Print Center New York’s "New Prints" exhibitions and the Main Exhibition of the Krakow Printmaking Triennials, among others.