Carlo Mollino: Salon 94.Carlo Mollino earned his place ill the history of design long ago. Lately, however, his idiosyncratic interiors have been discussed less than his stash of nearly 1,500 erotic photographs found in a drawer after his death. Who knew this eccentric modern had a passion for bookers and Polaroids? In this exhibition, about twenty photos of dolled-up and carefully posed Turinese prostitutes taken by Mollino himself were encased in deeply recessed frames that suggested tiny windows onto the mind of a pervy romantic. Mollino (1905-73), the son of a prominent engineer, studied architecture, then engineering, and went on to design everything from theatrical sets and clothing to ski lodges and race cars. Many of his designs made reference to the female form, which he apparently considered ideal (the legs and split back of a signature wooden side chair from 1947 suggest limbs stretching up and out of a smooth torso). He created elaborate interiors for his own two homes in Turin; stocked with an eclectic mix of artwork and modern and baroque furniture, these residences bore a resemblance to the classy "Italian-style" love shacks maintained by jet-setters like fellow Turin native, Fiat magnate, and uber-playboy Gianni Agnelli Giovanni Agnelli, 1866–1945, served as a cavalry officer until 1892. One of the founders (1899) of Fiat (Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino), he became its head in 1901. He also established (1907) Italy's first ball-bearing plant. Under Agnelli's leadership, Fiat became one of Europe's leading manufacturers of automobiles and also produced airplanes, railroad cars and locomotives, streetcars, and tractors as well as armament for the Italian military.. At a third, secret apartment, the Casa Zaira, Mollino entertained and photographed local prostitutes. We'll never know what they felt about this old man, and though they were surely used to being naked, we can probably assume they weren't often photographed. The designer dressed his subjects up and posed them--decorated them, really--in jewels, high heels, gloves, silk lingerie, and, in one case, a Paco Rabanne gown. They affect coquettish and sometimes tentatively seductive attitudes; we see tall lines, bruised legs, dimpled flesh--in other words, real bodies, the instrument and medium of their labor. Sometimes we recognize archetypes: the femme fatale (preening on a fur rug or suggestively holding a riding crop) alongside the innocent-on-the verge (long hair modestly arranged to reveal only a nipple). Mollino's props were as standard as those of any painter or studio photographer; one is inevitably reminded of the long and intimate relationship between pornographic fantasy and art, from Delacroix's harem paintings and Courbet's L'Origine to Picasso's Demoiselles and Picabia's kitsch kitsch [Ger.,=trash], term most frequently applied since the early 20th cent. to works considered pretentious and tasteless. Exploitative commercial objects such as Mona Lisa scarves and abominable plaster reproductions of sculptural masterpieces are described as kitsch, as are works that claim artistic value but are weak, cheap, or sentimental. A museum of kitsch was opened in Stuttgart. pinups. Like many such artworks, Mollino's pictures were first and foremost private and personal, and the secrecy that surrounds them is as important to their contemporary reception as the images themselves, it seems he simply could not take enough of them: Though he started his "project" in the late '30s, the Polaroid camera, which he picked up in 1963, increased his output enormously. Polaroids are special, after all: Only a single, unique print is ever produced. Is it on this basis that these pictures, intended for the consumption of their maker alone, were granted their high(er) art status? If so, it's tempting to wonder what Mollino would think.--MD |
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