Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,474,232 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Liliana Moro: Galleria EMI Fontana. (Mian).


Two basic elements made up Liliana Moro Moro - Moroni (Book of Mormon)'s installation, " ", 2001. The first was a material, glass, fragments of which covered the floors of the gallery's four rooms and crunched underfoot. You could say that the sharp, dry noise of the shards' continual shattering occupied the space as much as the sole object on display, also made of glass: a baby's crib CRIB - Campaign for Rights In Breastfeeding
CRIB - Card Reader Insertion Board
CRIB - Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaire en Bioéthique (Belgium)
CRIB - Chemical Risk Information Branch
CRIB - Clinical Risk Index for Babies
CRIB - Complete Rest In Bed
CRIB - Computer Resources Information Base
CRIB - Cooler Really Is Better (baby's room temperature)
CRIB - Criteria Reference Information Bank
CRIB - Critical Issues Bibliography
, which stood as a cold, empty, and solitary presence in the middle of the last room. The second element was nothing more than hole in the wall between two rooms. At first barely visible and seemingly negligible, this intervention in the gallery architecture ultimately provided an interpretive key for the installation.

Glass is a material that the artist has used in previous works to suggest contrary meanings--purity, clarity, fragility, and transparency versus danger, severity, and razor sharpness. Here, Moro evoked the world of childhood (suggested by the crib) as a metaphor for the relationship between innocence and cruelty, between vulnerability and violence. This is a world that has often been visited in order to narrate stories with or without happy endings. But Moro doesn't tell a story. Rather she organizes a mise-en-sc~ne, arranging the elements of the installation (the glass fragments, the crib, the hole) in such a way as to induce the viewer to make specific gestures d above all to become and actor in the artist's scenario despite the possibly disturbing implications of that participation.

First of all, one had to walk on the glass, breaking it and thereby creating with one's footsteps insidious, penetrating, and unmelodious sound fragments. Subsequent movements, room by room, brought us, like witches in some fairy tale, closer to the fragile crib that sat on the precarious splintered-glass surface. Moreover, viewers were invited to carry out another operation, either at the beginning or the end of their visit: to squint squint (skwint) strabismus.

squint (skwnt)
n.
See strabismus.
 through the hole. This is an extremely powerful and indiscreet gesture. he hole connected the second room to the one containing the crib, and the aperture acted as a perspectival cone framing the solitary, abandoned little object. Thus the viewer was forced to assume the embarrassing and unseemly role of the voyeur
1. A person who derives sexual gratification from observing the naked bodies or sexual acts of others, especially from a secret vantage point.
2. An obsessive observer of sordid or sensational subjects.
--impotent in the face of a tenuous equilibrium and possible tragedy. From this aperture one could spy on a scene in which nothing was happening; the immobility of the context only heightened the sense of danger, fear, and uncertainty. The hole became the fundamental element of the piece because it compelled the public to observe in a particular way and to become aware of the significance--and the violence--of its gaze.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Pioselli, Alessandra
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2002
Words:429
Previous Article:Armin Linke: Galleria Marabini. (Bologna).(Brief Article)
Next Article:"Are we there yet?": Glass Box. (Paris).(Paul O'Neill, David Blarney, Grace Weir)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Laura Ruggeri. (exhibit at Galleria Emi Fontana, Milan, Italy) (Reviews)
"Made in Italy." (various young Italian artists, Institute for Contemporary Art, London, England)
LILIANA MORO.(Brief Article)
MONICA BONVICINI.
Andrea Bowers.(Brief Article)
Waltzes.
Maternal instinct.(reader forum)(Letter to the Editor)
Mike Kelley: galleria emi fontana.(Milan)
Monica Bonvicini: Galleria EMI Fontana.(Critical Essay)
Ketty La Rocca: Galleria Emi Fontana.

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