Enzo Cucchi: Paolo Curti/Annamaria Gambuzzi & Co.After an absence of three years, Enzo Cucchi returned to Milan with an exhibition, "Prima neve" (First Snow), dominated by a single, large, plaster sculpture located in the first room of this modestly sized gallery. Il comandante della luce in perlustrazione (The Commander of Light on Patrol; all works 2004) recalls those vertical sculptures in Gothic cathedrals that were elongated e·lon·gate tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates To make or grow longer. adj. or elongated 1. Made longer; extended. 2. Having more length than width; slender. to compensate for being viewed from below, and it greeted the visitor with a strongly ambiguous charge. The nude male figure alludes to the features of Christ--head bowed, long beard and hair, sunken eyes--and brings to mind the deposition from the cross. His arms cover his genitals and, even more incongruously, one of them, wrapped behind his back, gives the image an almost derisive appearance, allowing religious allusion to coexist with its parodic reversal. This mocked Christ is presented to us as a two-faced Janus, simultaneously tragic and grotesque; like some bulky hunchback hunchback, abnormal outward curvature of the spine in the thoracic region. It is also known as kyphosis and humpback, and in its severe form a noticeable hump is evident on the back. , the character has a skull behind its head, its flayed and negative double, also bowed, its empty gaze turned downward. If the man who covers his groin and buttocks buttocks /but·tocks/ (but´oks) the two fleshy prominences formed by the gluteal muscles on the lower part of the back. seems to hold himself in a stylized styl·ize tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es 1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style. 2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize. , almost feminine posture, the same figure seen from the side seems monstrous, with an absurd and lugubrious lu·gu·bri·ous adj. Mournful, dismal, or gloomy, especially to an exaggerated or ludicrous degree. [From Latin l protuberance protuberance /pro·tu·ber·ance/ (-too´ber-ans) a projecting part, or prominence. mental protuberance growing out from its neck. In the space between the two heads, the lumpiness of the material evokes the mountains we have seen so often in Cucchi's paintings, an almost fairy-tale world where characters of dual nature wander about in archaized landscapes. It has been a long time since the artist has shown work as powerful as this extraordinary sculpture, which is exacting in terms of its fabrication and both emotionally formidable and disquieting in terms of its possible meanings. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] At once classicizing and barbaric--looking at it face on, I thought of Michelangelo's unfinished, rough-hewn masterpiece Rondanini Pieta (1555-64)--sacred and carnal, refined and vulgar, the work brings us back to the sort of pantheistic pan·the·ism n. 1. A doctrine identifying the Deity with the universe and its phenomena. 2. Belief in and worship of all gods. pan and popular religiosity re·li·gi·os·i·ty n. 1. The quality of being religious. 2. Excessive or affected piety. Noun 1. religiosity - exaggerated or affected piety and religious zeal religiousism, pietism, religionism that has characterized much of Cucchi's best work. Here it heats up from a particularly chilly and nocturnal, indeed Gothic, temperature, evoked by the looming skull, like a somewhat carnivalesque yet still alarming memento mori. The exhibition ended with two series of plaster works--"Lavori di bisogni della pelle" (Works of Needs of the Skin) and "Lavori di chi pensa alle cavalle" (Works of Those Who Think About Mares)--that call into question the distinctions between painting and sculpture, image and frame, text and commentary. In both, small nests made from interwoven in·ter·weave v. in·ter·wove , in·ter·wo·ven , inter·weav·ing, inter·weaves v.tr. 1. To weave together. 2. To blend together; intermix. v.intr. plaster twigs appear like so many painted containers, mounted on tables, not walls, yet acting as frames for a series of watercolors inhabited by human beings, roosters, and wild boars. Once again, Cucchi's enigmatic naturalism is combined with his tireless search for surprising technical and formal solutions. Translated from Italian by Marguerite Shore. |
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