MANZONI: Azimut

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MANZONI: Azimut G A G O S I A N G A L L E R Y 10 November 2011 PRESS RELEASE GAGOSIAN GALLERY 17-19 DAVIES STREET T. 020.7493.3020 LONDON W1K 3DE F. 020.7493.3025 GALLERY HOURS: Mon - Sat 10:00am – 6:00pm MANZONI: Azimut Thursday, 17 November 2011–Friday, 6 January 2012 Opening reception: Wednesday, November 16th, from 6 to 8 pm Following the acclaimed exhibition "Manzoni: A Retrospective" in New York in 2009, Gagosian Gallery is pleased to present "Manzoni: Azimut" at the Davies Street gallery in London. Organized in cooperation with the Fondazione Piero Manzoni, the exhibition celebrates the work of Manzoni and fellow artists during the brief life of the Azimut gallery in Milan from 1959 to 1960. On December 4, 1959, Azimut opened in the sub-basement of a furniture store on a narrow street around the corner from La Scala in Milan with an exhibition of Manzoni´s most radical work to date: Linee (Lines ), drawings of a single line on a length of paper, signed, rolled up and sealed in a cardboard tube, which he then labeled. A youthful, experimental exhibition space that lasted just eight months, Azimut presented thirteen exhibitions and became a nerve center for an international set of provocative young artists. The founding of the gallery by Manzoni and Enrico Castellani, with the help of their mentor Lucio Fontana, followed their collaboration on Azimuth , a journal dedicated to the "development of the newest and youngest avant-garde painting." Featuring works by artists such as Robert Rauschenberg, Heinz Mack, Jean Tinguely, and Yves Klein, Azimuth ´s two issues stand as essential documents of a radical “new conception” of art at the end of the 1950s. The exhibition "Manzoni: Azimut" brings together pivotal examples of Manzoni´s cycles Achromes , Linee , Uova Scultura (Egg Sculptures ) and Corpi d´Aria (Bodies of Air ) with early experimental canvases by his friends and collaborators in the Azimut project Enrico Castellani, Agostino Bonalumi, Dadamaino, and their guide Lucio Fontana. It is accompanied by a comprehensive publication by art historian Francesca Pola that tells the story of the Azimut/ Azimuth project and includes facsimiles of the journal, with new English translations. Piero Manzoni was born in Soncino, Italy, in 1933 and died in Milan in 1963. His brief career was one of the most radically inventive of the twentieth century, producing a body of work that continues to challenge the definitions of artistic sovereignty and virtuosity. His work is represented in public collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate Modern, London; Centre Pompidou, Paris and Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna, Roma; and Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin. It has been the subject of numerous international exhibitions, including retrospectives at the Musée d’art moderne de la ville de Paris (1991), Herning Kunstmuseum (1991), Castello di Rivoli, Turin (1992), Serpentine Gallery, Palazzo Reale (1997), London (1998), and MADRE, Naples (2007). The 2009 Gagosian Gallery exhibition, curated by Germano Celant, was the first comprehensive U.S. retrospective of Manzoni’s work. Per tutte le altre informazioni si prega di contattare la galleria di Davies Street a +44.207.841.9960 o [email protected]. 1 7 - 1 9 D A V I E S S T R E E T L O N D O N W I K 3 D E T . 0 2 0 . 7 4 9 3 . 3 0 2 0 F . 0 2 0 . 7 4 9 3 . 3 0 2 5 L O N D O N @ G A G O S I A N . C O M W W W . G A G O S I A N . C O M .
Recommended publications
  • Global Demand for Italian Art: Milan Modern and Contemporary
    Press release | Milan FOR IMMEDIATE R E L E A S E | 22 M a r c h 2 0 1 6 GLOBAL DEMAND FOR ITALIAN ART: MILAN MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY ALIGHIERO BOETTI (1940-1994) Mappa Executed in 1983 €800,000-1,200,000 Milan – Christie’s will present the annual sale of Milan Modern and Contemporary on 5 & 6 April 2016 at Palazzo Clerici, Milan. Following the strong results of last year’s auction, which was 100% sold in the evening section, realising over €20 million – a record for this category in Italy – and saw bidders from over 20 countries, this year continues to meet the ever-growing appetite for Italian art. The auction will offer a wide array of the great Post-War figures including Lucio Fontana, Alberto Burri, Enrico Castellani and Piero Manzoni; favourites from the Arte Povera canon – Alighiero Boetti, Pier Paolo Calzolari and Giulio Paolini; Pop art pioneers Mimmo Rotella and Tano Festa; as well as Modern classics by Gino Severini and Giacomo Balla. Highlights include an intricate and colourful embroidery, which forms part of Alighiero Boetti’s most famous ‘Mappe’ (Maps) series of artworks (1983, estimate: €800,000-1,200,000, illustrated above). Renato Pennisi, Director and Senior Specialist, Head of Sale, Christie's Italy: "We are pleased to present a rich array of works, which show the great variety of twentieth century Italian art movements. We are offering masterpieces ranging from early Futurism, Arte Povera icons through to the Masters of the Second World War - Fontana, Burri and Manzoni - and sections devoted to Pop art and Optical art." FUTURISMO: THE FIRST AVANT-GARDE Headlining the auction are a pair of works that epitomise the revolutionary nature of the Futurist movement; Gino Severini’s Tango Argentino (executed in 1913, estimate: €400,000- 700,000, pictured above) and Giacomo Balla’s Complesso colorato di frastuono + velocitá (c.1914, estimate: €400,000-600,000, pictured right) are presented alongside works by Roberto Marcello Iras Baldessari and Gerardo Dottori.
    [Show full text]
  • And Variations – Post-Wa Art from The
    Palazzo Venier dei Leoni 701 Dorsoduro 30123 Venezia, Italy Telephone 041 2405 411 Telefax 041 5206885 Press release THEMES AND VARIATIONS POST-WAR ART FROM THE GUGGENHEIM COLLECTIONS February 2 – August 4, 2002 On Friday 1st February 2002, the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, will inaugurate Themes and Variations – Post-war Art from the Guggenheim Collections. Curated by Luca Massimo Barbero, this 6-month cycle of installations will assemble paintings, sculptures and works on paper - both European and American, but predominantly Italian – from the holdings of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York, with a small number of additional private loans. This dynamic and innovative project sets out to provide a fuller understanding and contextualization of the post-war works in the Peggy Guggenheim Collection. A series of three two-month installations – examining in turn a succession of movements and artists with which Peggy Guggenheim was affiliated first in New York and later Venice - will present works by a strong group of post-war 20th century artists, including Edmondo Bacci, Francis Bacon, César, Joseph Cornell, Jean Dubuffet, Marcel Duchamp, Alberto Giacometti, Asger Jorn, Bice Lazzari, René Magritte, Henry Moore, Ben Nicholson, Mimmo Rotella, Giuseppe Santomaso, Tancredi, Laurence Vail, Victor Vasarely and Emilio Vedova. Themes and Variations provides an opportunity to present for the first time recent acquisitions of post-war art, including important works by Carla Accardi, Agostino Bonalumi, Costantino Nivola, Mimmo Rotella and Toti Scialoja, alongside previously acquired works by Edmondo Bacci, Lucio Fontana, Conrad Marca-Relli, Giuseppe Santomaso and Armando Pizzinato. A series of private loans will further strengthen the representation of Italian post-war art; it is in this context that the work of Mirko Basaldella will be presented in depth in the course of the initial February- March installation.
    [Show full text]
  • AGOSTINO BONALUMI: All the Shapes of Space / 1959 - 1976 4 October – 15 November 2013
    AGOSTINO BONALUMI: All the Shapes of Space / 1959 - 1976 4 October – 15 November 2013 ROBILANT + VOENA 38 Dover Street, London W1S 4NL First Solo Exhibition in the UK in over 50 years. Organized in cooperation with the Archivio Bonalumi. Exhibition curated and monograph edited by Francesca Pola under the supervision of the artist. Including over 20 works by Agostino Bonalumi alongside works by Fontana, Manzoni, Dadamaino and Castellani. Featuring loans from public and private collections, as well as works for sale. To include Blu Abitabile, 1967 – an installation not exhibited since 1970. Artist may be available for interview by special advance agreement. ROBILANT + VOENA are pleased to announce an exhibition of the Italian artist Agostino Bonalumi, opening in October at their London gallery. This long-overdue project will be the first solo presentation of this significant artist in the UK since 1960. Organized in cooperation with the artist and the Archivio Bonalumi, the exhibition will examine the work of Bonalumi during the 1960s and 1970s in relationship with the other artists of the Azimut group. The exhibition will bring together pivotal examples of Bonalumi´s shaped canvas with early experimental works by his friends and collaborators in the Azimut project: Enrico Castellani, Piero Manzoni, Dadamaino, and their guide Lucio Fontana. A selection of Bonalumi’s paintings from the beginning of the 60s to the late 70s, including some unpublished and never before exhibited canvases from Italian private collections, will form the core of the exhibition and will reaffirm the important role played by this internationally lesser known artist in the development of Modern Art in Italy.
    [Show full text]
  • For Immediate Release Dominique Lévy Presents the First London Solo Exhibition by Enrico Castellani with the Collaboration of T
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DOMINIQUE LÉVY PRESENTS THE FIRST LONDON SOLO EXHIBITION BY ENRICO CASTELLANI WITH THE COLLABORATION OF THE ARTIST AND THE FONDAZIONE ENRICO CASTELLANI Enrico Castellani 9 February – 26 March 2016 Dominique Lévy 22 Old Bond Street, London London...Dominique Lévy is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition in London by Enrico Castellani, with whom the gallery has worked since its inception in 2012. Opening in February 2016 at the gallery’s Old Bond Street location, the exhibition explores the ways in which painting can occupy three- dimensional space by showcasing recent as well as historical works by the artist, most of which are on view in London for the first time. A selection of Castellani’s large-scale shaped relief canvases Superfici bianche (White Surfaces) are presented in juxtaposition with recent angular metallic paintings titled Biangolare cromato (Bi-angular Chrome) and Angolare cromato (Angular Chrome), the latter of which Castellani installs in corners. These white and metallic works are placed in dialogue with one another, highlighting the ambient light and shadow effects that occur as the works activate the architectural space in which they are situated. These three- dimensional paintings are complemented by the recent sculpture Spartito, in which Castellani references a seminal work made in 1969 by bolting hundreds of sheets of paper together, creating a biomorphic minimalist form. The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive book featuring a newly commissioned essay by Angela Vettese, former President of the International Jury of the Venice Biennale and director of the graduate programme at the Università Iuav di Venezia.
    [Show full text]
  • ITALIAN NEO-RENAISSANCE: Bonalumi Scheggi 5 – 28 May 2015
    ITALIAN NEO-RENAISSANCE: Bonalumi Scheggi 5 – 28 May 2015 ROBILANT+VOENA in NEW YORK at Moretti Fine Art, 24 East 80th Street, 10075 New York Opening hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm Scheduled to coincide with Frieze New York and the broader program of art events in the city during May, ROBILANT+VOENA will present a survey of the Italian post-war Neo-Renaissance focusing on two key artists – Agostino Bonalumi and Paolo Scheggi. In 1966 these artists, alongside Enrico Castellani, were selected by Alfredo Bonino to represent the thriving Milanese art scene in his seminal exhibition Italy – New Tendencies (Galeria Bonino, NYC, Oct 11-Nov 4, 1966). Nearly fifty years later ROBILANT+VOENA will re-present their work to the New York public, in an exhibition curated by Francesca Pola, investigating their crucial role in the development of the Italian cultural landscape of the 1960s, alongside singular works by Lucio Fontana and Alberto Burri. The work of these artists matched radical experimentation with a classical background, and balanced breakthrough innovation with a distinct awareness of historical continuity. These developments represented a Neo-Renaissance where the most advanced achievements in creating a new relationship between matter, space and perception gave birth to a new and original “classic” vision. Alberto Burri and Lucio Fontana, with their crucial pioneering concepts of matter and space can be considered the double root of Italian Postwar art as a whole, and also of this specifically classical perspective. Agostino Bonalumi and Paolo Scheggi developed the relationship between shape and matter in strongly innovative ways: in their plastic use of monochrome to create three-dimensional shaped and environmental works, as well as the tactile physicality of their pieces.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SHARPER PERCEPTION Dynamic Art, Optical and Beyond 14 Jan - 12 Mar the SHARPER PERCEPTION Dynamic Art, Optical and Beyond
    THE SHARPER PERCEPTION Dynamic Art, Optical and beyond 14 Jan - 12 Mar THE SHARPER PERCEPTION Dynamic Art, Optical and beyond GR GALLERY 255 Bowery, 10002 New York January 14 - March 12, 2016 Curated by: Translation: powered by: Set per intestazione su foglio Giovanni Granzotto Giovanna Zuddas verticale THE SHARPER PERCEPTION Alberto Pasini A special thanks to: di Giovanni Granzotto Conceived and realized by Paolo Covre Ugo Granzotto Set per intestazione su foglio Antonio, Fiorenzo, Gaspare verticale BEYonD VisUAL PErspEctiVE www.gr-gallery.com e Giancarlo Lucchetta Flavia e Gianni Pasini di Alberto Pasini Set per intestazione su foglio Photograph credit: verticale Archivio Studio d’Arte G.R. Our thanks also go to: Stefano Barazza Pinuccia Agostini Maurizio Elia Tommaso Bet Giancarlo Gennaro Sergio Colussa ART WorKS Cesare Salvadeo Franco Costalonga Kinetic Art, Optical Art and Programmatic Art Nadia Costantini Press office and public relations: Duilio Dal Fabbro Different perceptual developments Alberto Donaudi Luciano Dureghello Transport: Maria Lucia Fabio Flavio Fasan Giorgio Ferrarin Inarte s.r.l. Lalli Munari Simone Prestini Finito di stampare Insurance: Sandi Renko nel mese di dicembre 2015 Generali, Treviso Rossella Tornquist presso le Grafiche De Bastiani Godega di Sant’Urbano - TV Valmore Studio d’Arte © Dario De Bastiani Editore, Graphic Design: Eva Zanardi Vittorio Veneto 2015 Serena Chies ISBN 978-88-8466-466-2 GioVAnni The GR Gallery is undertaking its Ameri- So, referring again to this area of inter- GRANZotto can adventure with an exhibition dedi- est, many supporting, sponsoring and cated to the wide, articulated and even promoting initiatives for young worthy contradictory world of perception.
    [Show full text]
  • Fondazione Musei Civici Di Venezia — Programma Programme 2015 —
    Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia — Programma Programme 2015 — 1 La programmazione della Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia per il 2015 The Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia’s programme for 2015 places cultural dà assoluta centralità alla produzione culturale nel campo della ricerca e production in the areas of research and cataloguing right at the centre of its della catalogazione, del restauro delle opere mobili e del restyling di sedi attention, together with the restoration of artworks and the restyling of the museali. La riapertura del Museo del Vetro ampliato e completamente museum venues. The reopening of the enlarged and completely redesigned Museo ridisegnato e la realizzazione del progetto Sublime Canova al Museo Correr, del Vetro, and the realisation of the Sublime Canova project at the Museo Correr, con l’accorpamento e il restyling espositivo delle opere del grande scultore with the grouping of the works by the great sculptor in the museum and their di proprietà del Museo, costituiscono due momenti straordinariamente presentation in a new layout, constitute two extremely important moments for importanti per la Città e per la Fondazione, coerenti con la strategia generale the city and for the Fondazione, in line with the general strategy launched in recent avviata in questi ultimi anni. Da Ca’ Pesaro a Palazzo Mocenigo, dallo stesso years. From Ca’ Pesaro to Palazzo Mocenigo and from the Museo Correr – with Museo Correr – con i restauri di Palazzo Reale – agli interventi a Palazzo the restorations in the Palazzo Reale – to the interventions in the Doge’s Palace Ducale (climatizzazione, restauri ecc.) la Fondazione ha sempre ritenuto (air conditioning, restorations, etc.), the Fondazione has always maintained as its prioritario innovare i servizi, i percorsi museografici, per garantire un livello priority the introduction of innovation in services and layout of exhibits to attune internazionale delle sedi museali.
    [Show full text]
  • Jan Henderikse to Infinity
    press release JAN HENDERIKSE TO INFINITY Galerie Schoots + Van Duyse, Antwerp, and Kunstzolder.be, Lembeke Curator: Antoon Melissen JAN HENDERIKSE TO INFINITY Summary From 28 June to 27 September, Galerie Schoots + Van Duyse in 100 words and Kunstzolder.be are staging an exhibition in Antwerp by Dutch artist Jan Henderikse (Delft, 1937), curated by independent publicist-curator Antoon Melissen. Henderikse, co-founder of the Dutch Nul Group in 1961, already moved to Dusseldorf in 1959, at that time the cradle of the international ZERO movement. ‘Jan Henderikse - ZERO to Infinity’ features work both from the Nul period and from later, including the most recent work from 2015. Furthermore, several large assemblages made in 1965-1967 from the collection of the artist have never previously been exhibited. JAN HENDERIKSE TO INFINITY Consistent with the increasing interest and revaluation of the international ZERO movement, Galerie Schoots + Van Duyse and Kunstzolder.be are organizing a major presentation by Jan Henderikse in Antwerp. In 1961, Henderikse (together with Armando, Henk Peeters and Jan Schoonhoven), was co-founder of the Dutch Nul Group, the artists’ group that expressly sought contact with the international ZERO movement and its sympathizers. Since 2000, Henderikse has been working both in New York and in his studio in Antwerp and is thus, together with Paul van Hoeydonck, one of the last artists of the ‘ZERO generation’ still active in Belgium. Under the title ‘Jan Henderikse - ZERO to Infinity’, independent publicist-curator Antoon Melissen has compiled an exhibition that contrasts early work from the Nul era with new work. Several large assemblages made in 1965-1967 from the collection of the artist have never previously been shown and are premiered in the exhibition.
    [Show full text]
  • Art in Europe 1945 — 1968 the Continent That the EU Does Not Know
    Art in Europe 1945 Art in — 1968 The Continent EU Does that the Not Know 1968 The The Continent that the EU Does Not Know Art in Europe 1945 — 1968 Supplement to the exhibition catalogue Art in Europe 1945 – 1968. The Continent that the EU Does Not Know Phase 1: Phase 2: Phase 3: Trauma and Remembrance Abstraction The Crisis of Easel Painting Trauma and Remembrance Art Informel and Tachism – Material Painting – 33 Gestures of Abstraction The Painting as an Object 43 49 The Cold War 39 Arte Povera as an Artistic Guerilla Tactic 53 Phase 6: Phase 7: Phase 8: New Visions and Tendencies New Forms of Interactivity Action Art Kinetic, Optical, and Light Art – The Audience as Performer The Artist as Performer The Reality of Movement, 101 105 the Viewer, and Light 73 New Visions 81 Neo-Constructivism 85 New Tendencies 89 Cybernetics and Computer Art – From Design to Programming 94 Visionary Architecture 97 Art in Europe 1945 – 1968. The Continent that the EU Does Not Know Introduction Praga Magica PETER WEIBEL MICHAEL BIELICKY 5 29 Phase 4: Phase 5: The Destruction of the From Representation Means of Representation to Reality The Destruction of the Means Nouveau Réalisme – of Representation A Dialog with the Real Things 57 61 Pop Art in the East and West 68 Phase 9: Phase 10: Conceptual Art Media Art The Concept of Image as From Space-based Concept Script to Time-based Imagery 115 121 Art in Europe 1945 – 1968. The Continent that the EU Does Not Know ZKM_Atria 1+2 October 22, 2016 – January 29, 2017 4 At the initiative of the State Museum Exhibition Introduction Center ROSIZO and the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow, the institutions of the Center for Fine Arts Brussels (BOZAR), the Pushkin Museum, and ROSIZIO planned and organized the major exhibition Art in Europe 1945–1968 in collaboration with the ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe.
    [Show full text]
  • Rome – Milan: Space and Colour, Rhythm and Matter 1 October
    Press Release Rome – Milan: Space and Colour, Rhythm and Matter 1 October – 28 November 2020 Private View: 1 October 2020, 12-8pm by appointment Mazzoleni is delighted to announce the launch of the new exhibition season in its London gallery on 1 October 2020, with the group show Rome – Milan: Space and Colour, Rhythm and Matter. The show brings together a number of the leading figures of the Italian art scene that were operating in these two major Italian cities with works realised mainly between the 1950s and 1960s. Acclaimed for their artistic revolutions, pioneers Lucio Fontana (1899-1968) and Alberto Burri (1915-1995) were the points of departure and reference for the experimentation later conducted by the artists born in the 1930s such as Agostino Bonalumi (1935-2013), Enrico Castellani (1930-2017), Dadamaino (1930-2004), Jannis Kounellis (1936-2017), Piero Manzoni (1933-1963) and Mario Schifano (1934-1998). They were to explore new and further strands of research as their artistic careers evolved. Fontana’s innovative reflections on space and Burri’s in-depth experimentation with materials were to be the driving forces behind the development of new artistic idioms. In parallel, predominantly through painting, Giulio Turcato (1912-1995), Piero Dorazio (1927-2005) and Carla Accardi (1924 -2014) (already members of the group Forma 1) combined a skilled use of shapes and colours with new “painterly” materials such as, foam rubber, enamels and casein. Meanwhile Giuseppe Capogrossi (1900-1972), the founder with Burri of the Origine group, developed a personal sign alphabet. In sculpture, from his debut alongside Lucio Fontana, Fausto Melotti (1901-1986) developed a lyrical and poetic dimension that led him to a truly unique artistic path of the Italian art scene.
    [Show full text]
  • UNFOLDING of HISTORY. AGOSTINO BONALUMI, SANDRO DE ALEXANDRIS” Curated by Marco Meneguzzo
    MILAN GALLERIA 10 A.M. ART FROM 10 JUNE TO 30 SEPTEMBER 2021 “UNFOLDING OF HISTORY. AGOSTINO BONALUMI, SANDRO DE ALEXANDRIS” curated by Marco Meneguzzo From 10 June to 30 September the Galleria 10 A.M. ART in Milan is organising the show Unfolding of history. Agostino Bonalumi, Sandro De Alexandris. In the show an important selection of works from the 1960s and 1970s will open a new dialogue between the researches of the two artists. This is what the curator, Marco Meneguzzo, has written: The habit of looking at a certain kind of reading of history – all histories – is usually generated by a very convincing interpretation of what has happened, and also of the inevitable generalisations that the distance in time from the events produces in those very interpretations. The history of art, which is made of individuals as well as of languages, is not immune from these generalisations and habits: the cataloguing by movements and by successive phases really is convenient (from the viewpoint of scholastic or frivolous divulgation) and allows the placing of each work of an artist in the place that news and the universally known attribute to them, and thus to define them once and for all, in such a way as to make clear what we are speaking about and anyway the territory in which we move. Luckily, history is a dynamic affair that, even without resorting to impossible revisionism, in the urgency of defining certain important moments of its course – important for us, not for history in itself which is indifferent –, together with generalisations, searches the opposite pole in order to refine its own view, to make it more acute until it finds the various underground rivers of its own course which, on the one hand, shift from the principle current and, on the other, perhaps finds in another direction part of that current that was held to run calmly to the mouth.
    [Show full text]
  • ENRICO CASTELLANI SUPERFICI/SURFACES/雕面 Massimo De Carlo Gallery Is Pleased to Present Superfici/Surfaces/雕面, the First
    ENRICO CASTELLANI SUPERFICI/SURFACES/雕面 Massimo De Carlo gallery is pleased to present Superfici/Surfaces/雕面, the first solo show by the renowned Italian painter Enrico Castellani (1930) in China. The exhibition will be composed by a range of fundamental works spanning from the early seventies to the first decade of 2000, retracing the career of this Italian master who was associated with the Zero movement and the magazine Azimuth, created with fellow artist and friend Piero Manzoni. Enrico Castellani was a key figure of the flourishing European avant-garde scene of the 1950’s and 1960’s tackling minimalism, spatiality and revolutionizing the notion of canvas. The show focuses on the seminal body of work Superfici (Surfaces): shaped relief canvases that Castellani started working on as early as 1959 and is still producing. These canvases signify and mark a historical moment when there was an essential quest for the dimensional and a land marking shift in the use of the canvas: it was no longer confined to being a background tool in aide of the abstract gesture but an active, physical and expanding surface that demands to exist. Each painting in the exhibition invites the viewer to reflect on one of the key topics of Castellani’s practice: the relationship between space and time. Repetition is addressed through the shape of the works and the different colours that the artist chooses in order to highlight his rigorous approach to the gestural. Grey, black, white and purple monochrome surfaces evoke the industrial Milanese sky, the city where his works were made, and emphasize the importance of light in defining the new dimensionality of the canvas.
    [Show full text]