Lucio Fontana
Mel Bochner
R. Luke DuBois
Michael Joaquin Grey
Yael Kanarek
Matthew Ritchie
Laura Blereau
An exhibition inspired by the writings of Lucio Fontana and the Academia Altamira - including works by Mel Bochner, R. Luke DuBois, Michael Joaquin Grey, Yael Kanarek and Matthew Ritchie. Gathering the voices of 5 contemporary artists the show focuses on expanded representations of space and dynamic movement. Also included will be photographic documentation of Fontana's 1951 illuminated arabesque for La Triennale di Milano - an early use of neon installation in an arts context.
An exhibition inspired by the writings of Lucio Fontana and the Academia Altamira - including
works by Mel Bochner, R. Luke DuBois, Michael Joaquin Grey, Yael Kanarek and Matthew Ritchie.
Curated by Laura Blereau
bitforms gallery is pleased to announce Spazialismo, a group exhibition that examines Lucio Fontana's
concepts in the 1940s and 50s about how we consider structures of space in the modern, yet natural,
world. The exhibit is also intended to serve as a vehicle for contemporary review of Spatialist texts - such
as "Manifesto Blanco" (1946), "Movinetto Spaziale"(1948), "Manifesto tecnico della Spazialismo" (1951)
and the enthusiastic "Television Manifesto" (1952).
In 1946 Fontana founded the Academia Altamira in Buenos Aries. An avant-garde art school, its aim was
to promote the idea that a new art was necessary to reflect the modern world as revealed by science.
Aligned with the Baroque tradition of depicting dynamic spaces of plastic movement, Fontana's ideas
were also concerned with phenomenology and continued dimensional discovery of Nature, of which man
is a part.
Gathering the voices of five contemporary artists - Mel Bochner, R. Luke DuBois, Michael Joaquin Grey,
Yael Kanarek and Matthew Ritchie - the exhibition focuses on expanded representations of space and
dynamic movement. Also included will be photographic documentation of Fontana's 1951 illuminated
arabesque for La Triennale di Milano - an early use of neon installation in an arts context.
The triumph of film... is a definitive evidence of the direction that the spirit has taken toward the
dynamic. In praise of this transformation in the nature of man, we abandon the use of the known
forms of art and move toward development of an art based upon the unity of space and time.
Movement - the property of evolution and development - is the basic condition of matter. Matter
exists in movement and in no other form; its development is eternal. The simultaneous
development of the phenomena of color and sound are what integrate the new art. The
subconscious - which houses all of the images perceived by intelligence - adopts the essence
and the form of these images and accepts notions that give form to the nature of man. The
subconscious shapes, completes, and transforms the individual. It gives him the orientation that
he received from the world and that the individual adopts when necessary. Society tends to
suppress the separation of these two forces in order to unite them into a single and greater
form; modern science bases itself upon the progressive unification of its branches. This new
state of consciousness gives rise to an integral art in which being functions and manifests itself
in its totality.
-excerpted from "Technical Manifesto of Spatialism" by Lucio Fontana on the occasion
of an international meeting on Dimensions held at the IXth Milan Triennale in 1951
Image: Lucio Fontana. Struttura al neon per la IX Triennale di Milano, 1951. Grand Staircase.
Photo: Aragozzini. Courtesy: Photo Archive © La Triennale di Milano
More info contact: Laura Blereau laura@bitforms.com (212) 366-6939
Opening Reception: Thursday, November 19, 6:00 - 8:30 PM
bitforms gallery
529 West 20th St New York NY 10011
Gallery Hours: 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM, Tue–Sat.
Free and open to the public
Nearest subway is the C/E to 23rd St in Chelsea