Category: arte

22
Feb

Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys. Elegantia

La Triennale di Milano presenta la prima personale del duo di artisti belgi Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys in un’istituzione italiana.
ELEGANTIA è la prima personale del duo di artisti belgi Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys in un’istituzione italiana. Concepita come la costruzione di un ambiente preciso in dialogo rigoroso con le sale del Palazzo dell’Arte, ELEGANTIA è stata immaginata come una messa in scena dell’idea stessa di “mostra”, riflesso mentale e miraggio artificiale di un allestimento. Indirettamente ispirata dalla ricca, complessa e ipertrofica storia di produzione e presentazione che caratterizza la Triennale e il suo Palazzo, la mostra è la caricatura di un’architettura, l’immagine di un’esposizione sulle “belle arti”, che si rivela – dopo pochi attimi di straniamento – come un catalogo ambiguo di orrori e solo apparenti normalità.

In trent’anni di lavoro insieme – dal loro primo incontro al Sint Lucas University College of Arts and Design di Bruxelles nel 1987 – Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys hanno dato forma a un corpus di opere eterogeneo e complesso che muove dalla produzione video per abbracciare poi il disegno e la scultura, l’installazione, il suono e la performance.

Sedotti e terrorizzati dalle regole meccaniche della società – psicologia della dominazione e dell’umiliazione – e dal dramma crudo della quotidianità, gli artisti danno vita a mondi paralleli attraverso la compilazione ossessiva di cataloghi e liste: persone, oggetti, macchine, animali, pezzi di architetture e angoli di città. Figure e personaggi della paura e dell’innocenza, della depravazione e della leggerezza sono presentati sulla scena senza gerarchia, giudizio morale o interpretazione sociale. Piatti e immobili, bidimensionali e stereotipati, sono abitanti di uno spazio ideale e distopico, testimoni muti e inermi del nostro mondo.

L’architettura della mostra – dispositivo spaziale e ottico per dare forma alla relazione ambigua tra soggetto e oggetto – è allestimento e esso stesso opera: un’enfilade di archi in falsa prospettiva – quasi ironicamente enfatizzata per proporzioni – è infatti l’immagine manifesto di un monumento che ostenta se stesso per poi rivelarsi piatto e tragi-comicamente inutile.

Una serie di teste – in gesso e pittura, concepite appositamente per Triennale di Milano – si allinea lungo l’enfilade di stanze e quinte disegnate: in apparenza teste classiche, in verità quasi campioni microcefali di civiltà indigene – pupille dilatate, attonite e spaventate di fronte alla realtà. Le poderose sculture bianche che abitano la mostra non sono corpi in marmo dalle forme auree, ma pesanti figure metalliche bidimensionali (White Elements, 2012-2016) dai volti perturbanti. Una sequenza di ritratti (Les Enigmes de Saarlouis, 2013); un gruppo di sculture in terra cruda (Der Schlamm von Braanst, 2008) provenienti da un disumano e inquietante laboratorio di ceramica; piccoli esperimenti sulla forma umana (White Elements, prototipos, 2016); una lunga serie di acquarelli dai soggetti ambigui (Fine Arts, 2015) e infine un’alta fontana da interni dalle fattezze umane e meccaniche (De Drie Wijsneuzen, 2013) completano il corpo di una mostra enigmaticamente classica e sottilmente rivelatrice.

Tra le forme romane e industriali del Palazzo dell’Arte, De Gruyter & Thys propongono con ELEGANTIA un esperimento sofisticato sull’idea stessa di “display”, e sul suo fallimento: modello possibile di una mostra senza autore, bidimensionale e deformata come lo spazio della nostra mente.Continue Reading..

21
Feb

Dalì and Schiaparelli

Dalì and Schiaparelli – presented in collaboration by The Dali Museum and Schiaparelli Paris – will feature haute couture gowns and accessories, jewelry, paintings, drawings, objects and photos, as well as new designs by Bertrand Guyon for Maison Schiaparelli. This will be the first exhibition dedicated to the creative relationship and works of Elsa Schiaparelli and Salvador Dali – friends and collaborators that set Paris and the world ablaze with their groundbreaking visions.

Elsa Schiaparelli was regarded as the most prominent figure in fashion between the two World Wars. Her designs deliberately subverted traditional notions of women’s roles and beauty, embracing and exaggerating the transgressive nature of fashion. Schiaparelli explored bold Surrealistic themes in her designs, heavily influenced by artists, especially Dali, with whom she often collaborated. The vibrant colors, experimental fabrics and elegant handmade decorations set her apart from other designers of the 1920s and 1930s. Some of the most notable clients for Schiaparelli’s haute couture designs included the Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson; heiress Daisy Fellowes; and actresses Mae West and Marlene Dietrich.

Schiaparelli wrote that she “invented” her dresses, and the designs were known for their elegant and daring aesthetic combined with exquisite craftsmanship – a marriage of new ideas with traditional craft. Her designs were like the paintings of Dali in that they combined renaissance precision with wild imagination and dreamlike visions. Their fashion and art both delighted and shocked the senses and that approach was a trademark of their collaborations; their works embodied a sense of freedom and possibility that enlivened popular culture during a tumultuous time.

The Dali will be celebrating the exhibition with a grand fashion show and gala, bringing Paris chic to downtown St. Petersburg. The event will allow guests a glimpse into the secret world of haute couture. Held on Saturday October 14, 2017, the black tie affair will begin with a fashion show featuring contemporary Schiaparelli designs followed by an elegant dinner reception. A more casual yet equally celebratory Sunday brunch will be held the following day. A variety of other events and programs will also accompany the show.

The Dali and Schiaparelli exhibition will be accompanied by a catalog with essays by Dilys Blum, Curator of Costume and Textiles for the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Dali Museum Curator of Exhibitions William Jeffett, Dali Museum Director Hank Hine, and exhibition consultant John William Barger III.

The exhibition is organized by The Dali, St. Petersburg FL in collaboration with Schiaparelli, Paris with loans from the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum and others.

The Dalì Museum
One Dali Blvd,
St. Petersburg, FL 33701

October 18, 2017 through January 18, 2018

Image Credit: Aphrodisiac Telephone (Lobster Telephone). Salvador Dali, 1938

 

20
Feb

Mario Nigro. Dal ‘ritmo verticale’ al ‘tempo totale’

La galleria A arte Invernizzi inaugura giovedì 23 febbraio 2017 alle ore 18.30 una mostra personale di Mario Nigro (Pistoia 1917 – Livorno 1992) che, in occasione del centenario dalla sua nascita, ripercorre il momento germinale di tutta la sua esperienza artistica, il ventennio che va dal 1948 al 1968.
L’esposizione presenta il percorso fondamentale dell’artista, dal suo Ritmo verticale del 1948 fino alle opere esposte alla XXXIV Biennale Internazionale d’Arte di Venezia del 1968.
Nella prima sala del piano superiore della galleria sono esposte opere realizzate a partire dal 1950. Questi lavori, dal ciclo “Scacchi”, testimoniano un momento di maturazione del linguaggio dell’artista, già orientato verso un interesse percettivo più dinamico e penetrante, che prelude, con l’accentuazione dell’elemento diagonale nel 1952, alla serie dello “Spazio totale”. Negli ambienti successivi dello stesso piano si trovano opere che ripercorrono l’evoluzione creativa di Mario Nigro, a partire dal Ritmo verticale del 1948, che elaborano e analizzano le sue prime suggestioni astratto-costruttive, fino al superamento della bidimensionalità del quadro in una nuova tensione tra spazio e forma che si risolve nell’intrecciarsi e accavallarsi dei piani negli “Spazi totali” del 1954.
All’ingresso della galleria è esposta Tempo e spazio: tensioni reticolari: simultaneità di elementi in lotta del 1954. Si tratta di un’opera fondamentale per comprendere i successivi sviluppi della pittura di Mario Nigro in relazione all’approfondimento dei concetti di tempo, simultaneità e progressività che diventeranno essenziali nelle opere degli anni seguenti.
Un’attenzione particolare viene inoltre riservata a un nucleo di opere del 1956. In seguito all’invasione sovietica dell’Ungheria in quell’anno, tutte le certezze politiche e ideologiche dell’artista vengono improvvisamente infrante. Con il crollo dell’utopia sociale che animava il suo lavoro, anche la fiducia nella purezza assoluta della geometria viene meno, lasciando il posto ad un progressivo accentuarsi e poi disgregarsi delle griglie spaziali, fino allo loro totale dissoluzione.
Il percorso espositivo si conclude al piano inferiore dove vengono presentate le opere esposte nella sala personale dell’artista alla XXXIV Biennale Internazionale d’Arte di Venezia del 1968. L’abisso prospettico delle opere precedenti esce dalla bidimensionalità della tela per diffondersi nello spazio, assumendo una dimensione ambientale nell’accumularsi in colonne o nel dispiegarsi lungo le pareti. Questo luogo vivo e pulsante si completa poi nel ritmo musicale sviluppato dal ripetersi dei piccoli tratti di colore che percorrono l’opera a terra dal titolo Le stagioni o dall’infinita tensione espansiva dei “Tralicci”. È in questa rinnovata sinergia tra spazio e tempo che le opere di Nigro raggiungono una totalità immersiva assoluta, nella quale, e durante la quale, lo spettatore si trova calato non tanto in una rappresentazione dell’esistenza ma in una sua concreta e drammatica manifestazione.Continue Reading..

18
Feb

Giuseppe Penone. Matrice

“Trees appear as solid beings, but if we observe them through time, in their growth they become a fluid, malleable matter. A tree is a being that memorizes its own shape and this shape is necessary to its life. Therefore, it is a perfect sculptural structure, because it carries the necessity of existence.” – Giuseppe Penone

FENDI presents the first exhibition of contemporary art at Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana in Rome.

From January 26 until July 16, 2017, the Maison’s headquarters hosts a solo exhibition entitled Matrice by Italian artist Giuseppe Penone.

The exhibition takes place in the extraordinary first floor of Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, which FENDI has restored and opened to the public for exhibitions and installations.

Matrice is a unique opportunity to admire a selection of historical works and new productions realized specifically for this occasion by Giuseppe Penone, one of the greatest living sculptors. The exhibition features 17 artworks that date from the 1970s to the present, including many that are rarely seen and will be shown in Italy for the first time.

The entire exhibition has been conceived in dialogue with the monumental architectural spaces of the Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, presenting a collection of artworks that contrast the clear-cut geometry and the marble facets of this building.

The exhibition is named after one of Giuseppe Penone’s most spectacular works, Matrice (2015), a 30-meter-long sculpture in which the trunk of a fir tree has been carved out following one of its growth rings, thus bringing to the surface the past of the tree and its transformations in time. A bronze mold has been cast in the wood, apparently freezing nature’s flow of life. Like many of Penone’s artworks, Matrice reveals the artist’s interest in the relationship between time and nature and, metaphorically, between nature, humankind and transience. In addition, a new major sculpture in stainless steel and bronze, over 20 meters tall, Abete (Fir Tree, 2013), is installed in front of Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, adding a new natural dimension to the abstract geometric architecture of the EUR area.Continue Reading..

14
Feb

Annette Messager. Messaggera

From February 10 to April 23, 2017  the French Academy in Rome – Villa Medici will host the first solo exhibition in Italy by Annette Messager, one of the most famous, innovative and non conformist French artists on the contemporary art scene.

Internationally speaking the exhibition is already looking like one of the big cultural events of the season. Titled Messaggera, the show combines the most remarkable works of a prestigious career with new ones specially created for the Villa. Taken together they testify to the eclecticism of an artist who makes nonchalant play with references both to art history and popular culture.

With Annette Messager, and at the instigation of director Muriel Mayette-Holtz, the French Academy in Rome – Villa Medici is initiating Une, its new series of contemporary art exhibitions, curated by Chiara Parisi: women artists internationally famed as contemporary icons will be presenting major shows with works for the most part not seen in Italy before. Each exposition will highlight the expressive force of the artist’s project and their vision.

Born in 1943 and laureate of the Golden Lion at the 2005 Venice Biennale, in 2016 Annette Messager received the prestigious Praemium Imperiale International Arts Award for sculpture. Not only sculpture, however, but also drawing, painting, photography, writing and embroidery, are the instruments she uses in her installations that are ironic reflections of her own experience.

“For me,” explains the artist, “transforming something is like playing. But playing seriously, the way children do. I consider myself an old child.” With these words she introduces us into a world founded on a balance between the familiar and the troubling, between dream and nightmare. A world of fabrics, colored pencils, doctored images, dolls, soft toys and stuffed animals.

At the Villa Medici Annette Messager offers an imaginative, dreamlike itinerary that sets up interaction between the interior and exterior spaces of the splendid Renaissance architecture. In an exploration of the revolts led by women, their fears and fantasies, the artist raises the issue of prejudice with a single intention: transforming taboos into totems. “When I started,” says Annette Messager, “the art world was almost exclusively male. Since then a lot more women have found their way in, but prejudices die hard. A woman artist triggers specific questions: I get asked about my private life, and if I have children. Women writers are more readily accepted, probably because they’ve inherited the tradition of keeping a diary.” With her highly personal way of interpreting our time, telling stories and creating disturbing ambiences, Messager challenges the social clichés about womanhood and plays her part in deconstructing stereotypes.Continue Reading..

14
Feb

Duncan Campbell

WIELS presents the first solo exhibition by Duncan Campbell (b. 1972) in Belgium. Irish-born, Glasgow-based Campbell is highly acclaimed for his revitalisation of documentary formats and experimental film. Campbell was recipient of the 2014 Turner Prize for his seminal film It for Others, originally commissionned by The Common Guild Glasgow and produced for the Scottish Pavillion at the Venice Biennial in 2013. His solo exhibition at WIELS comprises three of his major film works: It for Others (2013), Bernadette (2008), and o Joan, no… (2006). It for Others, the central work in this exhibition, has a double contextual appeal to a Belgian audience, first for its scrutiny of African sculpture in Alain Resnais and Chris Marker’s seminal film Les statues meurent aussi (Statues also Die, 1953) and for Michael Clark Company’s contemporary choreography. For this film, Campbell took Les statues meurent aussi as both source and artefact for his film to pursue a meditation on the life, death and the value of objects. Marker and Resnais’ film opens with the “When people die, they enter history. When statues die, they enter art. This botany of death is what we call culture.” So begins the film presented much like the objects that appear in the film: to be viewed in a time and place different from those of its making. Commissioned by Présence Africaine, it tracks objects from Sub-Saharan Africa to the Western metropolis, and the transition from religious fetish to commodity; from original to market reproduction.

The second work to be featured is Bernadette, a critically acclaimed film about the Irish Political Acitivist and Member of the British Parliament, Bernadette Devlin. This will be accompanied by archival documents from the People’s Democracy group of which Devlin was a member. The film installation is accompanied by a set of posters of the early stages of political in Northern Ireland, the “Troubles,” evoking also Devlin as a product of a political moment who was quick to grasp a bigger plot—the structural conflicts and tensions shared by all societies.

The third work, o Joan, no… is an abstract, cine-plasticist, sensorial film on vision and hearing. The presentation is completed with other printed works including a recent poem in tonalist associative modernist language. o Joan, no… begins in darkness; abstract darkness. As the film progresses the darkness is interrupted by light. A random sequence of lights ensues—theatre lights, streetlights, household lights, the lit end of a cigarette. The camera greets these interruptions in the darkness with alarm, reticence, perplexity, curiosity. The accompanying voice emits a series of grunts, moans, sighs, laughs.Continue Reading..

10
Feb

Hans Op de Beeck. The Silent Castle

“I’m not interested in simulating reality, otherwise I would probably have gone into film, as a set designer. I would like to interpret the world by creating fictional settings where we can perceive the echo of reality.” –Hans Op de Beeck

The Belgian artist Hans Op de Beeck (born in Turnhout in 1969, lives in Brussels) works with almost all available artistic media. Be it for his sculptures or expansive installations, his large-format watercolours or videos and animated films, he avails masterfully of the staging strategies of theatre, film and architecture so as to create atmospherically dense, dream-like images that always seem familiar and yet alien.

In the very special atmosphere of the Baroque moated castle in Morsbroich, Op de Beeck is presenting a broad selection of his works of the past 12 years. He has created a series of open stages which the viewer can enter—partly on foot, but always in his mind—and be transported into a world where reality and fiction become superimposed and where time seems to stand still: The Silent Castle. Visitors encounter life-sized plaster figures, quite naturally, as if they were at home in the castle’s former living spaces. Like the visitors themselves, they stand on soft carpets, resting, lost in thought or daydreaming. The carpets cushion the footsteps and muffle the sounds. Their grey colour blends with the reduced palette of Op de Beeck’s sculptural still lifes. Here, life pauses for a moment, giving rise to an atmosphere of concentration, intimacy and contemplation.

Hans Op de Beeck creates places of silence, scenarios in which the viewer can immerse himself or which he can fill with associations and memories of his own. But these works also create a subtle tension. The piano is silent, the kiddie rides in front of the supermarket are stationary, water lilies conceal the uncanny depths of the black lake, and yet something surprising could happen at any moment, be it solely in our minds.

The video Staging Silence (2) (2013) visualises the transience of those moments full of poetry. Using all kinds of accessories, such as cotton wool or sugar cubes, and even more astonishing effects, the video shows us whole landscapes—that disappear just as quickly. By contrast, the animated film Night Time (2015) relies completely on the comforting hours of night when we become reconciled with ourselves again. The rooms presented in that film are abandoned like the empty sets of his installations. They overwhelm or enchant the viewer, house him, and ultimately confront him with himself.Continue Reading..

05
Feb

Luca Andreoni. Le mie notti sono più belle dei vostri giorni

Dal 21 gennaio al 4 marzo 2017, in mostra alla MLZ Art Dep il lavoro inedito di Luca Andreoni Le mie notti sono più belle dei vostri giorni, un omaggio al cinema e alla fotografia.

Le mie notti sono più belle dei vostri giorni è un tributo all’amore, dalle sue forme più universali, come la passione per il cinema e la fotografia, alle sue forme più intime e personali, come le relazioni sentimentali tra esseri umani.

Realizzata all’interno della Cineteca di Bologna, dove sono conservati più di 70.000 film, la serie corre infatti lungo un doppio binario: mentre alcune immagini di grande formato restituiscono gli ambienti di questa cattedrale della memoria, le stampe di formato più piccolo, presentate singolarmente o composte in una grande installazione, costituiscono un attraversamento dell’archivio ad opera dall’artista che, prelevando attraverso la fotografia una selezione di titoli evocativi, ricostruisce la tipica struttura narrativa di una storia d’amore.

La mostra, curata da Francesca Lazzarini, è inserita nel calendario di eventi del Trieste Film Festival.

Luca Andreoni (1961) è uno dei più prolifici autori nel panorama della fotografia italiana contemporanea. Il suo precoce impegno nel campo artistico della fotografia di paesaggio, supportato da una ricerca scrupolosa quanto poetica, lo ha portato a intense espressioni di forti valori simbolici che caratterizzano il suo lavoro. La sua opera rigorosa è ben nota nel mondo della fotografia e dell’arte contemporanea e molte prestigiose istituzioni hanno richiesto la sua partecipazione a importanti mostre e pubblicazioni. Le sue fotografie sono state incluse in collezioni importanti, tra cui quelle di proprietà di Deutsche Bank, della Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, di Fondazione Fotografia e altre.



All’attività artistica e professionale affianca da tempo una intensa attività d’insegnamento: dal 2013 è docente di Fotografia presso l’Accademia Carrara di Belle Arti di Bergamo.
Dal 2009 è Guest Professor presso il Master universitario in Photography and Visual Design presso NABA, Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti, Milano.
Dal 1990 insegna presso la Scuola di Specializzazione in Storia dell’Arte dell’Università Cattolica di Milano, come docente del “Laboratorio di Fotografia applicata alle opere d’arte”.
Ha tenuto corsi di Fotografia presso Fondazione Fotografia, Modena, l’Accademia di Belle Arti di Bologna e presso l’Accademia di Belle Arti Aldo Galli di Como.
Ha inoltre insegnato in numerosi workshop, per istituzioni quali Fondazione Fotografia, Modena e Fondazione Forma per la Fotografia, Milano. Ha tenuto lectures pubbliche in istituzioni quali il Politecnico di Milano, l’Istituto Italiano di Cultura a Varsavia, Fondazione Fotografia a Modena, e in festival e fiere d’arte.
Dal 2008 al 2013 ha curato in Valle d’Aosta una residenza per giovani artisti rivolta a selezionati studenti di scuole d’arte e fotografia.

Luca Andreoni
Le mie notti sono più belle dei vostri giorni
a cura di Francesca Lazzarini
MLZ Art Dep
21 gennaio 2016 – 4 marzo 2017
Inaugurazione: 21 gennaio 2016, ore 17.30

30
Gen

KRM. Four hands

L’Esprit Du Mur (the spirit of the wall) is a concept and style of painting created by KRM, the French-German artist duo Chérif Zerdoumi and Geza Jager.
Their concept and style ESPRIT DU MUR is a rebel, urban art, based on human tragedy and the complexity of existence.
Their works reveal a portrait of city-life and freely express interior contradiction, suffering and joy. Their work is revolutionary, based on overlapping images, words and impulsive gests. Working with four hands on the same piece defines the duo’s working process and makes their confrontation authentic. The final result is an assembly of colour, emotions and different techniques. The work witnesses a contemporary actuality and treats social-political subjects and questions.
KRM and a running dog figure on each picture is their signum.

Sultan Gallery
South Subhan, Block 8, Street 105, Building #168 besides Sadeer.
Madinat al-Kuwait

25th January – 16th February; 10am – 4pm
(Closed on Fridays, Saturdays and Public Holidays)

Image: Fish, mixed media on wood, 122 x 125cm

report by amaliadilanno

28
Gen

Marina Abramović. The Cleaner

For more than four decades, Marina Abramović has worked with presence and her own body as her primary artistic media. This has made her one of the most widely acknowledged artists of our time. Her uncompromising self-exposure has evoked criticism and praise in equal measure. Now, Moderna Museet opens the exhibition The Cleaner – the artist’s first major retrospective in Europe.

The Cleaner was produced in close collaboration with Marina Abramović and features more than 120 works. It presents several of her best-known performances, including the Relation Works with German artist Ulay, her collaborator and partner from 1976-1988. These works take the form of live reperformances, films, installations and photographs from the 1970s to today. Moderna Museet is also delighted to show early paintings and works on paper from the 1960s and onwards, some of which are being exhibited for the first time. Also included are her relatively unknown audio works from the 1970s.

“Even in her earliest works, Marina Abramović expands the given boundaries, in terms of scale, medium, and the relationship to the audience. The responsibility shared by the artist and the participants for what the work can evolve into permeates her entire oeuvre”, says Lena Essling, curator of the exhibition.

Marina Abramović was born in Belgrade, Ex-Yugoslavia in 1946, to partisan parents, who met during WWII and were national heroes under Marshal Tito’s regime. Raised in her childhood primarily by her orthodox grandmother, religion and revolution impacted profoundly on her early life and continue to permeate her artistic practice. In Rhythm 5 (1974/2011) she sets fire to a communist star that can also be read as a pentagram when inverted. The video installation The Hero (2001) is a ritualistic elegy for her father. Abramović’s works seek the core of concepts such as loss, memory, being, pain, endurance and trust. Her work is a matter of life and death – questions about existence and art are brought to a head in ways that may both provoke and move us. Rarely has anyone explored the physical and mental pain thresholds as she does. In The Lovers (1988) Abramović and Ulay undertook a 90-day walk from opposite ends of the Great Wall of China. Their halfway meeting marked the end of their love affair and more than ten-year partnership.

“27 years ago, before her international breakthrough at the Venice Biennale, we had the honour of featuring Marina Abramović in an exhibition at Moderna Museet. We now take great pride in being the first museum in Europe to produce a retrospective exhibition of her work”, says Daniel Birnbaum, director of Moderna Museet.Continue Reading..