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Lorenzo Scotto di Luzio: Galleria Fonti.


Total darkness. At the back of the gallery, beyond the arches that divide its two spaces, a large screen showed Mondo mon·do   Slang
adj.
Enormous; huge: a mondo list of pizza toppings.

adv.
Extremely; very: a mondo big mistake.
 fantastico fan·tas·ti·co  
n. pl. fan·tas·ti·coes Informal
An extremely bizarre person.



[Italian, imaginary, from Late Latin phantasticus; see fantastic.]
 (Wonderful World), 2004, a short animated video by the young Neapolitan artist Lorenzo Scotto di Luzio. The opening image is a cooked chicken leg moving up and down--the first of a long series of curious symbols connected to one another like gears in a piece of eccentric machinery. (From the beginning, Scotto di Luzio has played with irony and paradox, as if to warn us that what we are about to see is his own idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 interpretation of life.) Next follows a series of abstract details that suggest a bicycle wheel, a car engine, the pulley of a torture machine. A caption informs us that the work has been inspired by T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets (1936-42). The Neapolitan artist evokes the poet's work with total freedom, appropriating only certain details, using above all the poem's structure and its tension between good and evil, horror and hope.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

We immerse ourselves in the atmosphere of the work. A man flies over what looks like Naples but could really be any Italian city. We are lulled by a sound like a carillon carillon, in music: see bell.
carillon

Musical instrument consisting of at least 23 cast bronze bells tuned in chromatic order. Usually located in a tower, it is played from a keyboard. Most carillons encompass three to four octaves.
 with a heartbeat (a stereo system was mounted on the gallery ceiling and a subwoofer A speaker that reproduces the lower end of the audio spectrum. A subwoofer system may include a crossover circuit which switches frequencies at approximately 100Hz and under to the subwoofer, while passing the rest of the signal to the main speakers.  hidden behind a corner). The images of the animated cartoon unfold in a half-abstract, half-naive idiom. We enter the dream and witness a dramatic episode: An airplane plunges, exploding over a verdant ver·dant  
adj.
1. Green with vegetation; covered with green growth.

2. Green.

3. Lacking experience or sophistication; naive.
 landscape; a taxi-limousine speeds by, heedless of the event. Inside, we recognize some strange characters. A clown is driving, while seated in the back we see an Orthodox Jewish banker, three masked terrorists, a pinup pin·up  
n.
1.
a. A picture, especially of a sexually attractive person, that is displayed on a wall.

b. A person considered a suitable model for such a picture.

2.
 girl, and a priest. These passengers resemble--and the likeness is hardly accidental--Italian and international political figures: powers of this world, men who sow terror. It is no accident that the next scene shows images of war and death, accompanied by the deafening noise of a helicopter. Here Scotto di Luzio's style is close to Expressionism, bringing to mind Munch or Grosz grosz  
n. pl. gro·szy
See Table at currency.



[Polish, from Czech gro
, but ground up into a mixture made from electronic and computer graphics.

Every detail of this work helps to illuminate--just as when we read Eliot--the concealed story line whose presence beneath the surface of daily life often eludes us. In another scene a mannequin-man travels by subway, mouthing unheard words. Magnified, the mouth becomes an abstract shape against a cobalt blue background. The image recalls something out of a pop video from the '80s, but the content is rather weightier. The words we lip-read are from the opening line of "East Coker," the second of the Four Quartets: "In my beginning is my end."

Translated from Italian by Marguerite Shore.
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Author:Romeo, Filippo
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUIT
Date:Apr 1, 2005
Words:457
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