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Alberto Giacometti
dal 15/5/2007 al 25/8/2007

Segnalato da

Kristin Steiner


approfondimenti

Alberto Giacometti



 
calendario eventi  :: 




15/5/2007

Alberto Giacometti

Kunsthaus Zurich, Zurich

The exhibition presents all the major sculptures from the seminal phase of the artist plus a selection of drawings in the midst of the permanent exhibition of the comprehensive collection of the Alberto Giacometti Foundation.


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En Route to the Avant-garde

From 16 May until 26 August 2007 Kunsthaus Zürich presents an exhibition concentrating on the first major phase of Alberto Giacometti’s sculptural oeuvre. Caught between the analytic depth of the figurative sculpture of Rodin and the new interest in Cubism and the art of Black Africa, it was at this point that Giacometti produced the first examples of what was to become his own characteristic style and, in doing so, also arrived at the threshold of his ground-breaking Surrealist work.

With around 30 sculptures, 45 drawings and 18 paintings this exhibition focuses on the less well-known early phase of the Swiss sculptor and painter Alberto Giacometti (1901–1966), whose later figures and paintings were to make him world famous. The exhibition is presented in the midst of the collection of the Alberto Giacometti Foundation, which provides a comprehensive insight into the artist’s oeuvre as a whole.

EARLY DAYS IN HIS FATHER’S STUDIO IN SWISS BREGAGLIA Giacometti’s first steps as an artist were shaped by life and work in the family of the well-known painter Giovanni Giacometti. As a seventeen-year old, the young Alberto was already producing astonishing works in a style that was all his own. However, this level of achievement did not survive the transition to life as a professional artist: what the young Giacometti had previously mastered intuitively now had to be regained through conscious application. From summer 1919 until late 1921 Giacometti searched to find his own way. Unsatisfactory experiences for some months at art schools in Geneva, trips to Italy and a lengthy stay in Rome (which made a lasting impression on him) and crises of confidence were interspersed with the skilful yet restrained encouragement of his father when he painted at home in his native Stampa.

TO PARIS TO STUDY WITH BOURDELLE
It was only when Giacometti moved to Paris and was accepted as a student in the class of Antoine Bourdelle at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in early 1922 that he finally decided to concentrate on sculpture. It can’t have been easy to make the move from the family home to one of the leading, international sculpture studios with dozens of students from all over the world. Giacometti still spent many months in Stampa, where he made heads of his mother and siblings. And it was only in 2006 that these works came to light again from the artist’s Paris estate. These are the sole surviving sculptures from this period; of all the other works the artist made in Paris up until 1925, all that remains are the very intense, crystalline life drawings and a self-portrait head.

EN ROUTE TO THE AVANT-GARDE
Dissatisfied with his attempts to capture the living being in likenesses, Giacometti turned to abstract art where the energy of pure forms could be released to greater effect. In so doing he took a step closer to the avant-garde: Brancusi and Archipenko, the Cubism of Lipchitz and Laurens, and the expressive, stylised art of non-European cultures in Black Africa, Indonesia, and the ancient Americas. Thanks to his studies with Bourdelle, Giacometti was now confident enough in his technique to work in parallel in these three different formal languages – figurative, Cubist, and ‘ethnographic’ – and to break new ground as one rubbed off on the other. His analytic approach to his work at the time is perfectly exemplified in the fascinating series of portraits of his father from 1927.
Classical sculptural themes also underpin his Cubist-influenced figurations. For, as he himself noted down, it was also the aim of abstract art to represent life. In his view it was certainly not enough simply to ‘cubify’ individual forms; on the contrary, the work must thrive and be effective on its own terms. In so saying, he was already anticipating the main aim of his mature work: the evocation of the living presence of human beings. Each of these sculptures reflects his efforts to grapple with the fundamental questions of creative forming: thus, in an African figure he discovers the bold opposition of solid and empty forms that ultimately led him to his ‘Femme cuillère’. This is not only the finest sculpture amongst this ‘ethnographic’ works, it is also the first of Giacometti’s great, hieratic, female figures and the outstanding masterwork from this phase.

ON THE THRESHOLD TO SURREALISM
All Giacometti’s struggles and researches during this early period culminated in his ‘Tête qui regarde’ and the similarly disc-like ‘Femmes’. And, in his use of the symbolic language of ‘art premier’ plus the possibilities of abstract stylisation in the design of the heads of his parents, he was to come up with a surprising innovation: a non-corporeal membrane that lives by light and shadow alone. It seems that this truly ‘surreal’ object was exactly what the Surrealists had been waiting for; within a matter of months the previously all but unknown young artist had been adopted by the Parisian avant-garde. And his new friends left him in no doubt as to what was expected of him: his ‘Boule suspendue’ opened a new chapter in Western sculpture during which Alberto Giacometti, as the most important Surrealist sculptor, took three-dimensional forming in an entirely new direction.

This exhibition was conceived in collaboration with the Giacometti scholar Casimiro Di Crescenzo, who was presenting it on a smaller scale in the Brolo Centre of Art and Culture in Mogliano Veneto until 6 May 2007. The considerably expanded presentation is curated by the Keeper of the Kunsthaus Collection, Christian Klemm. It is on show in the Kunsthaus until 26 August.

Image: Composition: Le couple (couché) (Komposition: Liegendes Paar), 1927 Bronze, 39,3 x 46 x 15 cm Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur © 2007 ProLitteris, Zürich

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