Palimpsest. Frequently charged with eroticism, his oeuvre also has a profound religious quality. The exhibition is divided into 3 distinct gallery spaces. The first section is dedicated to 3 monumental watercolors, collectively entitled 'A History of the Heart in Three Rainbows' (2009). For the second space the artist has created a series of large, semi-abstract photographic images transformed into a kind of 'wallpaper'. In the third visitors encounter some thirty of Clemente's key works from 1978 to 2011.
curator Pamela Kort and Max Hollein
Francesco Clemente, born in 1952 in Naples, has pioneered an extraordinary pictorial language
that draws on a variety of timeless symbols, myths, cultures, and philosophies. Frequently
charged with eroticism, his oeuvre also has a profound religious quality. The variety of mediums
which he employs and the subject matter of his work are deeply informed by Clemente’s nomadic
artistic life. Since the 1970s he has continually travelled between Italy and India, adding New
York City to his preferred places of residency since 1980. This exhibition at the Schirn Kunsthalle
is the first comprehensive showing of his paintings and drawings in Germany in more than a
quarter century. The exhibition, which will be on view from June 8 until September 4, 2011, brings
together some forty works made between 1978 and 2011. Taking as its starting point Clemente’s
early works on paper, the show also includes both large format paintings and more recent, spectacular monumental watercolours. Conceptualized in close cooperation with the artist, the exhibition brings to light for the first time the close resemblance of Clemente’s aesthetic to the manner
in which references are actualized in a palimpsest: effacement, partial erasure, and superimposition of writing surfaces. In so doing it reveals a concern at the centre of his oeuvre: Clemente’s
conviction in his role as an artist as a kind of universal witness of consciousness.
The exhibition “Francesco Clemente. Palimpsest” is sponsored by the Deutsche Bank Stiftung.
Realized in a variety of media such as pastel, fresco, oil, gouache and watercolor, Clemente’s
work interweaves traditional likenesses and narratives with more personal motifs and stories. In
his paintings forms and lines seem to emerge and recede forming multilayered records of experience. This aesthetic is quite similar to the technique of the palimpsest, employed in Antiquity and
the Middle Ages. Applied on used scrolls of parchment, it involved scraping, erasing and washing
the older manuscripts to yield a clean sheet for reuse, although in fact traces of the original texts
often remained visible.
The similarity of his method of working to a palimpsest is far from coincidental. Instead such a
technique points back to the origins of his artistic inclinations. As Clemente recently put it: “The
original impulse in my life as an artist was to write and to break from writing into image.” His concern with language was already evident at the young age of twelve, when a collection of his poems, Castelli di Sabbia was published. Thereafter he studied Greek and Latin in high school,
before moving to Rome in 1970, where he increasingly came to believe that art was the “last oral
tradition alive in the West.” It was then that he first saw it as his task to make work that had a
political valence. Clemente came of age as an artist during a time when the need for a renewal of
consciousness was the call of the day. Since then he has single-mindedly pursued giving form to
images that might help bring about an increased awareness of the need to break with established
notion of Self in order to expand awareness.
It was this goal and his deep interest in philosophy and spirituality that led Clemente to India for
the first time in 1973. He would spend more than half of the 1970s, at irregular intervals, particularly in the southern city of Madras on the east coast, present-day Chennai. He lived a simple life
with actress Alba Primiceri, whom he met in 1974 and married soon after. It wasn’t long before he
had set up a studio, begun to collaborate with local artists and exchange ideas with members of
the Theosophical Society there. In the late 1970s art critics increasingly linked his work the socalled “Italian Transavantgarde.” Although the “group,” which also included painters Sandro Chia,
Enzo Cucchi and Mimmo Paladino, attracted a great deal of international attention, Clemente
soon disassociated his work from theirs.
Clemente visited New York for the first time in 1980. Soon after arriving he not only began to collaborate with such writers as Allen Ginsberg and Robert Creeley, but the contemporary composer
Morton Feldman. In 1981 – at the same time the so-called death of painting was being fervently
proclaimed – Clemente decided to explore even more intensively the possibilities of this medium.
Part of this activity resulted in his collaborations with Jean-Michel Basquiat and Andy Warhol. His
non-conventional techniques of painting as well as his openness to collaborating with other artists
contributed to Clemente rapidly becoming a rising star of the international art scene. His works
were exhibited both at documenta 7 in Kassel (1982) and the Venice Biennial (1988, 1993 and
1995). Solo shows were held at such renowned institutions as the Nationalgalerie Berlin (1984),
Kestnergesellschaft in Hanover (1984/85), Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1994), Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum, New York (1999), and MADRE Museum, Naples (2009).
The exhibition “Francesco Clemente. Palimpsest” at Schirn Kunsthalle is divided into three distinct gallery spaces. The first section is dedicated to three monumental watercolors, collectively
entitled “A History of the Heart in Three Rainbows” (2009), each measuring over 18 meters long
and 185 centimeters high. With their scroll-like format and fluid, metamorphosing forms, the
works, appear to be almost natural, powerful palimpsests of the human spirit – landscapes, as it
were, of spiritual evolution. These large format watercolors, composed of constantly changing
layers of color, evoke various states of consciousness, which ebb away only to then take on new
dimensions.
For the second gallery space the artist has created a series of large, semi-abstract photographic
images transformed into a kind of “wallpaper.” Applied directly to the walls of the Schirn rotunda
and extending more than fourteen meters in length, it features fragments of letters, objects, works
and snapshots from his Broadway studio in New York City. This “wallpaper” evokes the poetic
and culturally eclectic context from which Clemente’s art continues to emerge.
In the third and last gallery space visitors encounter some thirty of Clemente’s key works from
1978 to 2011. More or less installed chronologically, they unfold as a kind of painted palimpsest.
At once epigrammatic and expansive, these works attest to the artists’ continual processing of
visual information in which some forms survive, while others die out. Following the September 11,
2001 attack on the Twin Towers in New York City, a site just a few blocks from Clemente’s studio,
he increasingly felt the urgency to continue making art that might help building bridges between
people and worlds.
Such works as “For a History of Women” (2009) and “Camouflage Paradise” (2010) push even
further to the limit the possibilities of using “contemplative languages still alive in spite of the on-slaught perpetrated by industrial society.” Their expanding and contracting sequential like forms,
articulate to his growing conviction in his role as an artist as a kind of universal witness of consciousness. Far more than a mere collagist, over the past 40 years Clemente has been steadily
pioneering a new kind of history painting with a quiet, yet insistent mediative power.
CATALOGUE: Francesco Clemente. Palimpsest. Edited by Max Hollein. With a preface by Max
Hollein, an interview with Francesco Clemente by Pamela Kort, essays by Derek Walcott and
Andrei Voznesensky and poems by Gregory Corso, Robert Creeley, Allen Ginsberg and Peter
Handke. German/English, 170 pages, ca. 90 illustrations, Verlag für moderne Kunst, Nürnberg,
2011, ISBN 978-3-86984-225-7, ca. 24.80 euros (Schirn) / 29 euros (trade edition).
A public discussion will take place on Wednesday, June 8, 2011 at 7 p.m.
Image: A History of the Heart in Three Rainbows (I), 2009. Watercolor on paper 185.7 x 374.8 cm. Courtesy Francesco Clemente
Press contact:
Dorothea Apovnik (head Press/Public Relations),
Markus Farr (press officer), Giannina Lisitano (press officer)
phone: (+49-69) 299882-148, fax: (+49-69) 299882-240, e-mail: presse@schirn.de
Press preview Tuesday, 7 June 2011, 11:00 am
Opening on Tuesday, June 7, 2011, at 7 p.m. Francesco Clemente will be present
Schirn Kunsthalle
Römerberg, D-60311 Frankfurt
Hours: Tue, Fri–Sun 10 a.m. – 7 p.m., Wed & Thu 10 a.m. – 10 p.m.
Admission: 7 euros, reduced 5 euros, family ticket 14 euros, combination ticket also admitting to the exhibition “Secret Societies”: 12 euros, free entrance for children aged under 8.