The first major UK gallery exhibition features works from the 1960s to 2003. "Building is a journey through the territory he works in, so his process is determined by the conditions he finds, his materials-whether man-made or natural-depend upon what is locally available," wrote curator Germano Celant.
London—Pace London, in collaboration with Fondazione Merz, is honoured to present a momentous exhibition of
the late Italian artist Mario Merz from 26 September to 8 November 2014 at 6 Burlington Gardens. Featuring works
from the 1960s to 2003, this retrospective marks the first major UK gallery staging of the artist’s work in over twenty
years and Pace’s first exhibition of Merz’s work.
To accompany the exhibition, Pace will publish a catalogue highlighting both the works in the exhibition and ar-
chival materials from the artist. The catalogue will feature a new essay by Dr. Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, Andrew W.
Mellon Professor of Modern Art at Harvard University, and Merz’s final interview with Hans Ulrich Obrist, Co-Direc-
tor of Exhibitions and Programmes and Director of International Projects at the Serpentine Galleries, London. Pace
London will celebrate the catalogue’s publication at the gallery on Thursday 16 October.
Merz reacted against the dominant trends in art from the 1950s and 1960s, rejecting the mythic aspirations of
movements like Abstract Expressionism in favour of a more grounded art rooted in simple materials and nature,
prompting his inclusion in Italy’s loosely organised Arte Povera movement. Merz’s presiding interest throughout
his career was the transformation of materials by placing them in contact with alternate forces of energy, drawing
his art into a more organic state. “I work from the emotions I get from the archetypal structure that cancels the
material. Then, once I have procured the object I try to take possession of its structure with my hands, arranging
it in various positions till I feel it is in unison with me physically...,” Merz said. “In fact the point of my work is to
regain possession of ‘things’, by avoiding filling them out with projections, and to keep their limited but individual
primary presence alive in myself.” This preoccupation—what curator Harald Szeeman called Merz’s “interior
necessity”—inspired the range of Merz’s formal motif, including the igloo, nature, tables, neon lighting, and the
Fibonacci sequence, all of which feature in the exhibition.
The exhibition’s centerpiece is Spostamenti della Terra e della Luna su un Asse (Movements of the Earth and
the Moon on an Axis) (2003), a three-domed installation and the final igloo he made. Merz began constructing
igloos in 1968 using a variety of materials, and this particular one combines many of these earthen and industrial
objects—metal rods, neon, clamps, clay, glass and stone—in its tripartite structure. Merz’s igloos are among his
most iconic works, providing a free-standing and independent form to affect material energies, however imper-
manent or precarious they may be. “For him it is the act of building, not the finished structure that is meaningful.
Building is a journey through the territory he works in, so his process is determined by the conditions he finds, his
materials—whether man-made or natural—depend upon what is locally available,” wrote curator Germano Celant.
The artist’s interest in light and energy found its most enduring expression in his use of neon tubes. Merz em-
ployed neon lights on materials such as bottles, synthesizing the industrial qualities of the tube with the chemical
and its immaterial radiance. In Igloo con vortice (Igloo with Vortex) (1981), on public view for the first time since
his 1989 retrospective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Merz placed a blue neon light amidst a
swath of bundled brushwood leaning against a mixed media rendering of a cone and dome. “The neon is experi-
enced as an energetic flux or spear of light that passes through the object, thus destroying the idea of the solidity
of the object,” wrote Celant. “Punctured by the neon, the object becomes annulled as an icon but it is redefined
as material; the neon abandons its own physicality and becomes light.”
Merz also used neon in Linea (Line) (1991), a work that straddles the line between painting and sculpture, de-
picting the first nineteen terms of the Fibonacci sequence in blue neon on a raw canvas suspended from a metal
frame. The mathematical sequence, in which each term is determined by the sum of the two previous values,
became a hallmark of the artist’s practice for its resonance with both the spiral and nature, as many interlocutors
have cited Fibonacci’s sequence as mirroring organic patterns. Spirals recur in several works in the exhibition,
including the sprawling, installation Une Ouvrée, une mesure de terre qui donne un portrait bien terrestre (A work,
a measure of land that gives a very earthly portrait) (1987), a rectilinear spiral of mesa-like concrete blocks and
firewood on view on the gallery’s second floor. The spiral functioned as an allegory for growth and development,
spawning outward to grow and incorporate more space, but also change its form and energy. “If you make an
assemblage, you create a sort of concentrated power that transmits a naturally more optic emotion, but also a
feeling of presence.” The spiral echoes the tables Merz made and painted throughout his career, which served
as a stage for his assemblages but also connected to broader formal and conceptual ideas of line and space. “I
reject linear, one by one, or assembly-line fabrication of spaces. I reject the idea that there can be a fixed number
of people in a space,” Merz wrote in 1973.
The exhibition includes sculptures and works on paper that express some of his most enduring motifs. Merz’s in-
terest in art emerged during his imprisonment in 1945, while detained for anti-Fascist activities he began regularly
drawing spiraling forms without lifting his pen from the page. These activities combined with his reaction against
the Italian state informed his desire to defy the status quo of art through a turn toward simpler materials and im-
agery. The works on paper, although drawn from various points in his life, speak to Merz’s sustained investment in
the ideas that inspired his art, depicting spirals as well as organic form with a range of materials and objects such
as raincoats, which became a hallmark of many of his mixed media and two-dimensional works. These works,
and the exhibition as a whole, attest to his pursuit of a distinctive and avant garde project steeped in new way of
making art. Merz said, “I think that everything has already been destroyed and, as far as I’m concerned, I want to
put things right again, really clean things out.”
Mario Merz (b. 1925, Milan; d. 2003, Milan) is one of the most prominent artists to emerge from Italy in the postwar
period and one of the best known figures in the Arte Povera movement. After growing up and studying medicine
n Turin, Merz joined an anti-Fascist group that led to his imprisonment in 1945 where he became a voracious
drawer. Merz exhibited his paintings of organic matter in his first solo exhibition in 1954 and, by 1966, was in-
cluding ephemera and neon lights in his sculptures. In 1967, he became part of the loosely defined Arte Povera
movement, a term coined by Germano Celant. Merz created art and broadened his materials throughout the rest
of his life. He was married to artist Marisa Merz, who he met in the 1950s. He has participated in landmark group
exhibitions including When Attitudes Become Form. Bern 1969 / Venice 2013 at Fondazione Prada in the 2013
Venice Biennale; Arte Povera. The Great Awakening, Kunstmuseum, Basel (2012-13); Zero to Infinity: Arte Povera
1962-1972, Tate Modern, London (2001); the Venice Biennale (1997, 1976, 1972); Documenta (1982, 1977, 1972);
and Live in Your Head. When Attitudes Become Form, Kunsthalle, Bern (1969). In 2003, Merz received Japan’s
Praemium Imperiale.
Mario Merz has had solo exhibitions at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds (2011); Kunstmuseum, Winterthur (2007);
Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Turin (2005); Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires (2002); Stedelijk
Museum, Amsterdam (1994); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (1989); Museum of Contemporary Art,
Los Angeles (1989); Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark (1988); CAPC/Musée d’art contem-
porain, Bordeaux (1987); Musée d’art contemporain, Montréal (1987); Kunsthuas, Zürich (1985); Albright-Knox
Gallery, Buffalo, NY (1984); Moderna Museet, Stockholm (1983); The Israel Museum, Jerusalem (1983); Kunsthal-
le, Basel (1975, 1981); Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (1980); Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (1975);
and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (1972). Fondazione Merz, Turin, has maintained a permanent exhibition of the
artist’s work since opening in 2005.
Merz’s work is included in numerous prominent public collections worldwide, including The Art Institute of Chica-
go; Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Turin; Centre national d’art et de culture Georges Pompidou,
Paris; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC; Louisiana Museum
of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid; Museo Nazionale
delle Arti del XXI Secolo, Rome; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; The
Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona; National Gallery of Art, Washington,
DC; The National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, New York; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate Modern, London; and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
This is Pace’s first exhibition with the artist.
PACE
Pace is a leading contemporary art gallery representing many of the most significant international artists and es-
tates of the 20th and 21st centuries. Founded by Arne Glimcher in Boston in 1960 and led by Marc Glimcher, Pace
has been a constant, vital force in the art world and has introduced many renowned artists’ work to the public for
the first time. Pace has mounted more than 800 exhibitions, including scholarly exhibitions that have subsequently
travelled to museums, and published nearly 450 exhibition catalogues. Today Pace has ten locations worldwide:
four in New York; two in London; one in Beijing, one in Hong Kong and temporary spaces in Menlo Park, California
and Zuoz, Switzerland. Pace London inaugurated its flagship gallery at 6 Burlington Gardens with the exhibition
Rothko/Sugimoto: Dark Paintings and Seascapes, in 2012.
Image: Mario Merz, Movements of the Earth and the Moon on an Axis, 2003, triple igloo, Metal, tubes, glass, stone, neon, clamps, clay, 19’7”x16’4”x9’8”, View 1, © Mario Merz by SIAE, Courtesy Fondazione Merz.
For press inquiries, please contact Nicolas Smirnoff, nicolas@pacegallery.com / +44 203 206 7613
Private view: Thursday 25 September 2014, 6.30 – 8.30 p.m.
Pace London
6 Burlington Gardens
open to the public Tuesday to Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.