Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,488,972 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

CLAUDIA LOSI.


LUIGI FRANCO ARTE CONTEMPORANEA

Claudia Losi takes walking as a point of departure in her work. For her, "walking the terrain" doesn't just mean going about on foot in nature, but also listening to places, investigating analogies between processes of growth in nature and structures that organize the formation of thought. Or, better, intuiting more than investigating, for Losi's research is by no means scientific. While she may call on such disciplines as geography, cartography cartography: see map., geology, and ethnology ethnology /eth·nol·o·gy/ (eth-nol´ah-je) the science dealing with the major cultural groups of humans, their descent, relationship, etc. (her projects stem from a collaboration with the writer and geographer Matteo Meschiari), works like those in "Marmagne"--which comprised Marmagne, 1999-2000, and Moribana, 1999--take shape from the direct experience of perceiving space with the body, feeling it physically and psychologically and thus also intellectually.

During one of her reconnoiters, in Burgundy, the artist discovered an abandonedtrout farm. She shot exactly ten photographs of the hatchery's cement basins. She printed them in black and white on large-scale canvases and then embroidered their surfaces. Using white thread, she wove into each photograph an image of one of ten hypothetical phases in the process of continental drift continental drift - In 1980 David Turner remarked that KRC ran "at the speed of the continental drift"., the threads running in and out of the stratifications and super-impositions of plant elements and water reflecting the sky. Thus in Marmagne the unfathomably distant time of a remote geological era merges with the infinitesimal, with the minimal and imperceptible time of the slow, everyday mutation of things: a passing cloud, dry twigs twig (twig) a final ramification, as of branches of a nerve or blood vessel. floating by, a flower, the ruffling of the surface, the nature that lines the water sinking into the vegetation filling one of the basins.

The artist then abandoned thirty paraffin forms in the water at the trout farm. Shaped like landmasses subject to continental drift, they were left to the mercy of another drift, thus representing the extremely slow separation of the continents. (Moribana, a term that refers to the Eastern art of arranging plants in water, is the title of this action, documented on video.) Losi has long focused her attention on geographic sites or plant elements--a glacier in Vorland, 1998, the polar cap in Nord (North), 1998, the Orkney islands Orkney Islands, archipelago and council area (1991 pop. 19,650), 376 sq mi (974 sq km), N Scotland, consisting of about 70 islands in the Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea, N of Scottish mainland across the Pentland Firth. About 20 islands are inhabited. Mainland (Pomona), the largest, has Kirkwall, the county town, and Stromness. Other large islands are Hoy, South Ronaldsay, Stronsay, Sanday, Westray, and Rousay.

The climate is mild, windy, and wet.
 in Orkney, 1999, for example. Using materials such as paraffin, stones, fish scales, locust-tree thorns, and cotton thread, embroidering profiles and landscapes on balls of thread or other supports, her work can be extremely refined formally. Her cartography is not pure transcription or representation.

First of all, the image of drift expresses an idea that is organized in constellations, floating memories that associate one with another, migrate and mutate. The activity of embroidery, another constant in Losi's work, functions similarly to walking: A slow, repeated gesture becomes a form for explicating an idea, for narrating time, for organizing mental maps. Embroidering is a way to review and revive the physical and mental experience of traversing space and time much as one would measure it with one's footsteps. Embroidering images of lichen lichen /li·chen/ (lik´'n)
1. any of certain plants formed by the mutualistic combination of an alga and a fungus.
2. any of various papular skin diseases in which the lesions are typically small, firm papules set close together.
 on raw canvases, as Losi did in an earlier work, Tavole vegetali (Botanical plates), 1995, or weaving the drift of continents in Marmagne--mimetically repeating, point after point, the growth of plant organisms or the invisible but incessant movement of the earth--Losi gives shape to time and thereby to memory, to history, and to the complexity that time engraves within the structures of both place and thought.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Luigi Franco Arte Contemporanea exhibition
Author:Pioselli, Alessandra
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUIT
Date:Mar 1, 2001
Words:545
Previous Article:NINO LONGOBARDI.(Galleria Civica exhibtion)(Brief Article)
Next Article:FREDERIC LEFEVER.(Galerie Gabrielle Maubrie exhibition)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Matt Mullican: More Details from an Imaginary Universe.(Brief Article)
MIXED EXPOSURES.(Brief Article)
YVES KLEIN.(CENTRO PER L'ARTE CONTEMPORANEA LUIGI PECCI)(Brief Article)
MANUELA CIRINO.(CIOCCA ARTE CONTEMP0RANEA)(Brief Article)
GIOVANNI RIZZOLI.(Galleria Otto Arte Contemporanea exhibition)(Brief Article)
MAURIZIO CANNAVACCIUOLO.(Francesca Kaufmann Gallery and Franco Noero exhibitions)(Brief Article)
GALLERIA CIVICA D'ARTE MODERNA E CONTEMPORANEA.(Mario Airo)(Brief Article)
Castello Di Rivoli, Turin. (Reviews).
Wim Delvoye: Centro per l'Arte Contemporanea Luigi Pecci.(Prato)(the scatological takes center stage in this retrospective exhibition)
Antonio Riello: Galleria D'Arte Contemporanea.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles