Alighiero Boetti
Luciano Fabro
Jannis Kounellis
Mario Merz
Giulio Paolini
Domenico Bianchi
Bruce Nauman
Michelangelo Pistoletto
Fausto Melotti
Marisa Merz
Luciano Fabro
Giuseppe Penone
Gilberto Zorio
Giovanni Anselmo
Gino de Dominicis
Claudio Parmiggiani
Remo Salvadori
Piero Manzoni
Lucio Fontana
Enrico Castellani
Francesco Lo Savio
Jean Louis Maubant
Francisco Jarauta
A History of Italian Art
Curators: Jean Louis Maubant & Francisco Jarauta
This exhibition, organised by the IVAM and the Museo Cantonale d’Arte in
Lugano, presents for the first time in Spain a selection of over one hundred
masterpieces of postwar Italian art from one of the most important and
internationally prestigious art collection of gallery-owner Margherita Stein. In the
best tradition of gallery-owners cum collectors, Stein chose the works that she
felt passionate about rather than those that would further the art trade. This was
a passion that she dedicated her whole life to and which earned her the staunch
friendship of the artists whom she dealt with for more than forty years. The
exhibition, thanks to the extraordinary collection of works that comprise it,
documents crucial moments in the development of contemporary art with a view
to reflecting the complexity of the historical-artistic moment and the constant
evolution of the language of its protagonists.
This exhibition reveals the existence of the most solid emblematic side of
European art, showing great curiosity in examining and exploiting the possible
continuations of the historic avant-gardes. But also a European art steeped in
doubt at the rise to power of American art and another way of experiencing
culture. The itinerary of the exhibition allows us to view different art styles in the
work of, Alighiero Boetti, Luciano Fabro, Jannis Kounellis, Mario Merz, Giulio
Paolini, Domenico Bianchi, Bruce Nauman, Michelangelo Pistoletto and Fausto
Melotti, among others, and scrutinises the experimentation carried out by these
artists in their search for innovative forms and methods in their production
process.
The work of Manzoni, Fontana and Castellani is amply represented in the
exhibition, as are artists not so well known to the Spanish public, such as
Uncini, Lo Savio or Colla. One of the most original artists in the Italian art scene
is also present: Fausto Melotti, Manzoni’s unclassifiable friend. The ceramic
pieces (Manzoni, Melotti) from the Albisola workshops, the monochromes and
the sculptures that are a “manifesto” of conscious radicalness (Lo Savio,
Fontana, Manzoni) tell the tale of northern Italy in the fifties and sixties, always
full of classical and contemporary history, closely related to literary circles and
reminiscent of constructivism.
The Galleria Stein opened in Turin in 1966. It soon became a daily meeting
place for artists and Ms Stein, where important debates about art and culture
were held. Some of the first artists who showed their work in the gallery were
Calzolari, Boetti and Paolini along with Manzoni and Fontana. All or nearly all
the artists that created the Arte Povera movement exhibited there. The gallery
was an apartment at the same time; works were exhibited in the hall, the
drawing room, the billiard room and site-specific pieces were made for certain
places like the bathroom, the kitchen or the corridors.
Margherita Stein also worked with German and American artists. But her
relationship with Mario and Marisa Merz, Luciano Fabro or Pistoletto, among
other artists who frequented her gallery and whom she admired, led her to
make the decision of collecting their works. In this way, she conserved all the
work of Boetti, who held his first solo exhibition in the gallery in 1967. Later,
Giuseppe Penone Gilberto Zorio, Giovanni Anselmo, Gino de Dominicis and
Claudio Parmiggiani showed their works regularly in the gallery. Remo
Salvadori and Domenico Bianchi, among others, represent the generation that
followed, in the eighties.
With this unique collection, the IVAM offers the opportunity to reflect about the
art system and about a way to collect art for over fifty years in a European
country, at a time when the commitment of artists was as great as that of
collectors; when intellectual and spiritual complicity helped artistic production to
prosper. And when the emotional content of a work of art could turn a gallery-
owner into a collector, determined to conserve the testimonial function of art for
future generations.
This exhibition serves to pay tribute to the curator, Jean Louis Maubant,
recently deceased.
Co-produced by: Museo Cantonale d’Arte. Lugano
The catalogue published for the exhibition contains texts by Consuelo Císcar; Marco Franciolli, Jean Louis Maubant; Francisco Jarauta; Bruno Corà, Giulio Paolini, and an interview by Catherine Francblin, and is illustrated with reproductions of the works displayed.
Image: Mario Merz, From Continent to Continent, 1993
For any further request we invite you to address the Department of Communication (34) 96 3867679 or send an e-mail to comunicacion@ivam.es
IVAM Institut Valencià d'Art Modern
Guillem de Castro, 118, 46003 Valencia
Horary: From Tuesday to Sunday, 10:00 - 20:00. Closed mondays