Sperone Westwater
New York
257 Bowery
212 9997337 FAX 212 9997338
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Two exhibitions
dal 9/1/2013 al 22/2/2013
tue-sat 10am-6pm

Segnalato da

Gagliardi Art System



 
calendario eventi  :: 




9/1/2013

Two exhibitions

Sperone Westwater, New York

Fabio Viale uses marble exclusively to recontextualize banal objects, such as crates and tires, and to reinterpret art historical icons. 'A Picture Gallery in the Italian Tradition of the Quadreria (1750-1850)' showcases 29 paintings and drawings, all in the Italian figurative tradition created between the mid-18th and mid-19th century.


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Fabio Viale: Stargate

New York, NY: 4 December 2012 – Sperone Westwater is pleased to announce Stargate, Fabio Viale’s first solo exhibition in New York. For his realistic sculptures, Viale uses marble exclusively to recontextualize banal objects, such as crates and tires, and to reinterpret art historical icons. Stargate is on view from 10 January through 23 February 2013.

The exhibition title refers to Viale’s recent work Stargate (2010/2011), which consists of stacked and attached plastic grocery crates crafted in marble on a large scale (78 3/4 x 63 x 47 1/4 inches). With unusual technical virtuosity, Viale creates a kind of totem-like work, suggestive of a doorway leading to other worlds and galaxies -- unknown adventures.

Viale works alone, using machinery to roughly carve blocks of marble, and finishing the sculpture by hand. In Thank you and Goodbye (2012), Viale employs a computer-controlled robot to render large-scale “paper bags” made of marble.

Infinite (2011) presents two life-size interlocking tires in black marble. Based off of real rubber tires, the crafting of Infinite is so intricate and precise that it replicates each tread mark and corporate logo visible on the original objects.

Most surprising and incongruous is Ahgalla III (2008), a functional boat 55 1/8 inches long, complete with an engine. The artist has navigated Ahgalla in the sea near Carrara and on the waterways in Milan, Venice, St. Petersburg, and Moscow. Viale has long been fascinated with the relationship between water and marble, which is formed by the sedimentation under the seabed. The artist is retracing the stone back to its origin. Anchor (2010) transforms an object used in construction into a monumental sculpture.

History and memory inspire Viale’s Souvenir series: Souvenir (Pietá) III (2006) is a life-size marble sculpture of the dead body of Jesus based on Michelangelo’s Pietá (1498-99). In Viale’s work, however, the body of Jesus is lying over a block of marble instead of in the arms of the Virgin Mary. By isolating the figure of Jesus, Viale criticizes the commercialism of such symbols, the mass appeal and distribution of these figures as replicas, as “souvenirs”.

Born in Cuneo, Italy in 1975, Viale lives and works in Torino, Italy, where he studied sculpture. Viale’s recent solo museum exhibitions include Marble at Loft Project Etagi, Saint Petersburg (2011); Fabio Viale: Marble at the Garage Center for Contemporary Culture, Moscow (2011); and Primo piano d’artista: Fabio Viale at the Museo del Novecento, Milan (2012). Viale’s work has been included in recent group exhibitions at the Millenium Art Museum, Beijing (2006); XIII Biennale Internazionale Di Scultura di Carrara, Italy (2008); Gian Enzo Sperone Gallery in Sent, Switzerland (2010); and The Flag Art Foundation, New York (2011). This year his work, Thank you and Goodbye earned first prize by the jury of the 2012 Henraux Foundation Award in Querceta, Italy.

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A Picture Gallery in the Italian Tradition of the Quadreria (1750-1850)

In collaboration with Galleria Carlo Virgilio, Rome
Curated by Stefano Grandesso, Gian Enzo Sperone, Carlo Virgilio
Catalogue Introduction by Joseph J. Rishel

New York, NY: 13 December 2012 – In collaboration with Galleria Carlo Virgilio, Rome, Sperone Westwater is pleased to present, A Picture Gallery in the Italian Tradition of the Quadreria (1750-1850). The exhibition showcases 29 paintings and drawings, all in the Italian figurative tradition, by various European masters created between the mid-18th and mid-19th century. A Picture Gallery in the Italian Tradition of the Quadreria (1750-1850) is on view at Sperone Westwater 10 January through 23 February 2013.

The exhibition aims to evoke the manner in which collections – known as quadrerie – were formed in Italy in the 18th and 19th Centuries, as well as the way in which they were displayed, covering entire walls of the palazzo that housed them. This criterion predates the modern picture gallery, which follows a more scientific idea of classification derived from Illuminism. In addition to satisfying decorative motivations, the arrangement of works within a Quadreria followed the collector’s personal taste, with pictures hung according to related subjects or artistic genres.

Most of the works on view have never been exhibited or published, although many of them are widely documented in literary sources of the time. Firmly grounded in research, the exhibition presents significant works – masterpieces in some cases – by artists who are not widely known beyond specialist academic circles, but who nonetheless have played a key role in art history, with a view to illustrating the progress that research in Italy has made over the past thirty years.

The catalogue accompanying the exhibition groups the works according to artistic or iconographic genre, first with a series of portraits that offer insight into society of the time, followed by history and figure painting – considered the noblest artistic genre in the neoclassical academy tradition – and lastly, landscapes, to illustrate the phenomenon of the Grand Tour with Classical ruins and popular views.

Among the works in the exhibition is a painting by Francesco Celebrano shows members of the aristocracy having a luncheon on a country estate. This painting exemplifies the ancien régime, and was likely intended as a model for a tapestry destined for the Neapolitan court. A portrait by Matilde Malechini portrays a French baroness in Rome during the Napoleonic occupation, while Giuseppe Tominz offers an austere, full-length portrait of a member of the new bourgeoisie in Trieste, the founder of the Assicurazioni Generali. The academy nude studies of Francesco Monti and Placido Fabris are followed by two demanding depictions of episodes from Classical history by Gaspare Landi and Pelagio Palagi – influential figures in the artistic circles of Rome and Milan.

The visionary reconstructions of Antiquity in the colored drawings by Giovan Battista Dell’Era counterbalance the series of sentimental mythological evocations by Friedrich Rehberg, Natale Carta and Henry Tresham, who presented his large painting, Sleeping Nymph and Cupid, to the Royal Academy of London in 1797. This section culminates in the romantic Renaissance literary subject by Francesco Podesti. A significant counter-revolutionary allegory by August Nicodemo shows the Dauphin at the tomb of his father, Louis XVI, while another large-format allegory by Francesco Caucig depicts the sentiment/malaise of melancholy with its remedies from Classical medicine.

After the sublime Biblical subject by François Gérard, the monochrome by Bernardino Nocchi of a sculpture by Canova, there follows a series of views of famous buildings of the time such as Hubert Robert’s interior of Palazzo Farnese at Caprarola, and of Classical ruins like the Temple of Diana at Baia in the capriccio by Carlo Bonavia. Two aristocratic travelers admire ruins in the paintings by Andrea Appiani, while an aqueduct is featured in the Roman campagna by Beniamino de Francesco. Volcanoes are the subject of two large-scale paintings by Pierre-Jacques Volaire and Carlo de Paris – the 1771 eruption of the Vesuvius in the Volaire, a virtuoso study of the effects of light caused by the glow of the lava, with lightning and the glare of the moon illuminating the panorama towards Naples and Ischia in the distance. The second volcano is the Pico de Orizaba in Mexico, in a work by a Roman school artist who attempted to document the native customs of Mexico and the grandiose and unspoiled landscapes of that country prior to the imminent transformations that would be brought by civilization. In contrast to this work, there is Antonio Basoli, who produced numerous imaginary views without almost ever leaving his native Bologna.

Curated by Stefano Grandesso, Gian Enzo Sperone and Carlo Virgilio, the exhibition has been produced in collaboration with Galleria Carlo Virgilio in Rome, a gallery that specializes in international art in Italy over the 18th and 19th century.

A fully illustrated catalogue will be published on occasion of this exhibition. The book includes an introduction by Joseph J. Rishel, the Gisela and Dennis Alter Senior Curator of European Painting before 1900 and Senior Curator of the John G Johnson Collection and the Rodin Museum, and scholarly entries by Emilie Beck Saiello, J. Patrice Marandel, Fernando Mazzocca, Ksenija Rozman and Nicola Spinosa.

For more information and images, please contact Maryse Brand at + 1 212 999 7337 or maryse@speronewestwater.com. Please find further documentation on our website www.speronewestwater.com.

IN ARCHIVIO [34]
Painting in Italy 1910s-1950s / Nanda Vigo
dal 29/10/2015 al 21/12/2015

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