Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,599,653 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Giulio Paolini: Fondazione Prada.


A small white canvas is barely defined by the diagonals and compass points that demarcate de·mar·cate  
tr.v. de·mar·cat·ed, de·mar·cat·ing, de·mar·cates
1. To set the boundaries of; delimit.

2. To separate clearly as if by boundaries; distinguish: demarcate categories.
 its space, like a sheet of paper prepared for a simple technical drawing for school: Giulio Paolini's Disegno geometrico (Geometrical Drawing), 1960, marks the beginning of one of the most fruitful artistic and conceptual adventures in the recent history of art, in Italy and internationally. At the Fondazione Prada, this most conceptual of the arte povera The term Arte Povera (Italian for poor art) was introduced by the Italian art critic and curator, Germano Celant, in 1967. His pioneering texts and a series of key exhibitions provided a collective identity for a number of young Italian artists based in Turin, Milan, Genoa and Rome.  artists--together with his "fellow traveler fellow traveler
n.
One who sympathizes with or supports the tenets and program of an organized group, such as the Communist Party, without being a member.

Noun 1.
," the curator Germano Celant--presented, along with Disegno geometrico, an extraordinary series of works executed through 1972. It revolves around a large central installation, Ipotesi per una mostra (Hypothesis for an Exhibition), 1963/2003, that forty years ago was too ambitious for the scant means and credibility that a young artist might have commanded from the Italian art Italian art, works of art produced in the geographic region that now constitutes the nation of Italy. Italian art has engendered great public interest and involvement, resulting in the consistent production of monumental and spectacular works.  world: the silhouettes of a crowd of visitors silk-screened in black and white onto large panes of glass. The figures are set within a space, also silk-screened, where one can make out geometric partitions of hypothetical walls of the hypothetical room where they are located.

The context of the work thus becomes part of the work itself, in keeping with Conceptual art's most salient line of thought. But Paolini addresses the problem from a surprising and autonomous angle: He looks at the status of the work from the point of view of the space it inhabits. All his activity, in fact, involves a constant search for the definition of the space within which the work can emerge and the artist can act. "Looking at a picture," the artist writes in the catalogue that accompanies this show, "is like standing at a window. This is what causes artist and spectator to become one figure, the same person: It is this threshold, a real borderline borderline /bor·der·line/ (-lin) of a phenomenon, straddling the dividing line between two categories.
borderline 
, that allows us to perceive that ray of light--the image of the work--before it goes further, losing intensity in the room behind us, amid worldly things." Paolini reproposes the traditional notion of the painting as "window," as a representation of the space, codified cod·i·fy  
tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies
1. To reduce to a code: codify laws.

2. To arrange or systematize.
 and delimited de·lim·it   also de·lim·i·tate
tr.v. de·lim·it·ed also de·lim·i·tat·ed, de·lim·it·ing also de·lim·i·tat·ing, de·lim·its also de·lim·i·tates
To establish the limits or boundaries of; demarcate.
 by its surface, outline, and frame. For him, the statement is a point of departure for an awareness of making art, of being an artist. This choice seems deliberately to evoke a rational, classicizing viewpoint typical of the Renaissance: It constructs a space that is the sole place within which relationships between figures and characters make sense, as in the perspectival space of Western tradition; the space in question is unitary and reunites every possible fragment of reality that is found immersed im·merse  
tr.v. im·mersed, im·mers·ing, im·mers·es
1. To cover completely in a liquid; submerge.

2. To baptize by submerging in water.

3.
 therein. Thus for Paolini, the spatial definition of relational possibilities, which usually constitutes the preparatory labor of a work of art, becomes the completion of the work itself. This is why all his works are theoretically enclosed within that first Geometrical Drawing, which constitutes the field of the infinite hypotheses of representation. Every subsequent work--such as the famous Giovane che guarda Lorenzo Lotto Lorenzo Lotto (c. 1480 – 1556) was a Northern Italian painter draughtsman and illustrator, traditionally placed in the Venetian school. He painted mainly altarpieces, religious subjects and portraits.  (Young Man Looking at Lorenzo Lotto), 1967, a black-and-white photograph of a work by the sixteenth-century Venetian, whose subject looks beyond the "threshold" of the painting toward the artist who is painting his portrait--is a continuous approach toward and recapitulation recapitulation, theory, stated as the biogenetic law by E. H. Haeckel, that the embryological development of the individual repeats the stages in the evolutionary development of the species.  of "where we are," which for Paolini becomes "who we are."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

--Marco Meneguzzo

Translated from Italian by Marguerite Shore.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, 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:Milan
Author:Meneguzzo, Marco
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:547
Previous Article:Stefano Arienti: Studio Guenzani.(Milan)
Next Article:Edouard Leve: Galerie Loevenbruck.(Paris)



Related Articles
Party lines. (art institutions in Milan, Italy that are managed by the private sector)
Louise Bourgeois. (Fondazione Prada, Milan, Italy)
The Iceman Cometh.(Marc Quinn )(Brief Article)
MIFED Changes Owners ... Almost.(Brief Article)
Barry McGee. (Reviews: Milan).
MIFED: one threat gone, one more to go. (Film Markets).
My two cents.(exhibitors upset with MIFED organizers)(Editorial)
Giulio Paolini.(Milan)(two new works and a selection of sixty classics from 1960-1972)(Brief Article)
Francesco Vezzoli: Fondazione Prada.(Milan)(Critical Essay)
Andreas Slominski: Serpentine Gallery.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles