Alvise Bittente: Galleria Perugi.Alvise Bittente reproduces insignificant objects in ink on paper, following a serial cataloguing scheme: wastebaskets, trash cans, clothing, furniture, and whatever else one finds in the spaces of everyday life. Everything can be registered and put down on paper, removed from its referential context and thus presented without spatial or semantic relationships with other things, isolated like an icon in the blank space Noun 1. blank space - a blank area; "write your name in the space provided" space, place surface area, expanse, area - the extent of a 2-dimensional surface enclosed within a boundary; "the area of a rectangle"; "it was about 500 square feet in area" of the paper. The categories represented in this exhibition were knives, corks, plungers, ladles, other kitchen utensils, kitchen brooms, and so on. Each category comprises from three to ten drawings on paper or, in one instance, on kitchen aprons. The serial system drains the object of affectivity, and what matters are not its individual characteristics but rather the fact that it fulfills a certain kind of function. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Bittente's line develops subtly, like an embroidery, and what remains of the object is the black skeleton of the ink mark, summary but precise. His approach is like that of a technical draftsman--detailed, cool, and objectified. In his drawings, the world of functions and things seems to be an end in itself, without a foothold in a subjective realm that might imbue im·bue tr.v. im·bued, im·bu·ing, im·bues 1. To inspire or influence thoroughly; pervade: work imbued with the revolutionary spirit. See Synonyms at charge. 2. it with meaning. The drawings have been affixed af·fix tr.v. af·fixed, af·fix·ing, af·fix·es 1. To secure to something; attach: affix a label to a package. 2. to a rigid support and laminated, making the mark seem ethereal ethereal /ethe·re·al/ (e-ther´e-il) 1. pertaining to, prepared with, containing, or resembling ether. 2. evanescent; delicate. e·the·re·al adj. 1. and even further annulling any possible subjectivity. For the works in this show, reviving the technique of papier colle, Bittente has used colored wallpaper in place of his former white sheets, superimposing on it another piece of wallpaper, which has been drawn on. The old wallpaper is exploited as an abstract background with a repetitive ornamental motif. But the artist has introduced certain divergent notes, points of irony that subvert his assumed distance from the subject. First of all there is the show's Latin title: "De rebus domesticis, seu affectuum lascivissimae picturae," or "Of the Domestic, or The Pornography of Feelings." And then there are the titles of the individual works (all 2005), among them Circo incisione d'incapace, o il campo cam·po n. pl. cam·pos A large grassy plain in South America, with scattered bushes and small trees. [Spanish, field, from Latin campus.] di grano placcato d'oro (Circus Engraving of the Incapable, or The Gold-Plated Wheat Field)--kitchen brooms; Carnevale al macello (Carnival at the Slaughterhouse slaughterhouse: see abattoir; meatpacking. )--ladles; L'idra aulico solido con una marcia in piu (The Solid Courtly court·ly adj. court·li·er, court·li·est 1. Suitable for a royal court; stately: courtly furniture and pictures. 2. Elegant; refined: courtly manners. Hydra with an Extra Gear)--plungers; La classica sindone di chi ha le mani in pasta (The Classic Shroud of One Who Has a Finger in Every Pie)--other kitchen utensils. These puns and nonsense phrases, linguistic provocations, introduce a note of the surreal into the prevailing conceptual neutrality. The silent world of things, that domestic sphere familiar to the point of banality, here reveals unexpected twists in meaning. Through the incongruous in·con·gru·ous adj. 1. Lacking in harmony; incompatible: a joke that was incongruous with polite conversation. 2. and the grotesque, the artist makes fun of our affective and sentimental projections onto things. At the center of the gallery, the raised corner of a Persian carpet Persian carpet Noun a hand-made carpet or rug with flowing or geometric designs in rich colours allowed the viewer to glimpse a mound of wood shavings, hidden from view like dust. The imaginative dimension disassembles things, a subtle wind that overturns them and lifts them up from their apparent inertia. Translated from Italian by Marguerite Shore. |
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