Marco Tirelli: Galleria D'arte Moderna.In this exhibition, which represents the last ten years of Marco Tirelli's activity, the artist attempted to draw our attention to the internal coherence that characterizes his work over time. While the consistent foundation for Tirelli's art is geometric abstraction, his paintings are not rigidly rationalist, deterministic, aprioristic, or deductive de·duc·tive adj. 1. Of or based on deduction. 2. Involving or using deduction in reasoning. de·duc . The artist does not devise disembodied schemas, and his forms, volumes, and spaces--while primary, even elementary--are not ideal essences but instead seem impregnated im·preg·nate tr.v. im·preg·nat·ed, im·preg·nat·ing, im·preg·nates 1. To make pregnant; inseminate. 2. To fertilize (an ovum, for example). 3. by the empirical concreteness of experience as we perceive it. Tirelli often works with deviations of perspective, perceptual "slips," and spatial incongruities of vision, from which optical ambiguities cannot help but arise. Many of his forms and volumetric volumetric /vol·u·met·ric/ (vol?u-met´rik) pertaining to or accompanied by measurement in volumes. vol·u·met·ric adj. Of or relating to measurement by volume. planes result from the progressive purification and distillation of everyday objects such as boxes and drawers, stairs and shelves. And his colors (predominantly blacks, grays, greens, ochers, and earth tones) are never pure or harsh but are subtly modulated with light and shade; in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , they are colors of real life and not its projection or ideal model. In long arrays of canvases hung one next to the other or arranged to construct vast polyptychs, Tirelli uses his repertoire of forms and signs to present anew the secular mystery of seeing and its concomitant inner reflection. Indeed, the enigma of the quotidian quotidian /quo·tid·i·an/ (kwo-tid´e-an) recurring every day; see malaria. quo·tid·i·an adj. Recurring daily. Used especially of attacks of malaria. lies precisely in the fact that it holds, hidden within, the ecstatic wonder of the sublime. Tirelli's work has an explicit conceptual, compositional, and poetic genealogy that is rooted in architecture. His antecedents are not overtly modernist so much as archaic, characterized by archetypal ar·che·type n. 1. An original model or type after which other similar things are patterned; a prototype: "'Frankenstein' . . . 'Dracula' . . . 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' . . . elements and forms (the tumulus tumulus (t `myələs), plural tumuli (–lī), in archaeology, a heap of earth or stones placed over a grave. , the column, the door, the sphere). Sortie works refer to the power of Roman construction, while others point to Piranesi, dramatically suspended between nostalgia for the classical design process and a modern awareness of the ruin and the fragment. In some way these canvases represent (beyond any mimetic-figurative impulse) virtual places, possible dwellings, architectures of the spirit, which Tirelli invites us, or challenges us, to inhabit. He puts together an enormous and complex stage set, marked by a strong sense of structural value. Elements are reciprocally supporting and complementary, and the significance of individual signs often changes in relation to their compositional, formal, and chromatic chromatic /chro·mat·ic/ (kro-mat´ik)1. pertaining to color; stainable with dyes. 2. pertaining to chromatin. chro·mat·ic adj. 1. Relating to color or colors. context. It is precisely this strong, decisive internal and structural coherence that in some mariner limits these imaginary horizons, holds them at the threshold At the Threshold, whose son Lil E. Tee won the 1992 Kentucky Derby for W. Cal Partee, died March 23 of a stroke at Purdue University School of Veterinary Medicine in West Lafayette, Ind. The 21-year-old stallion stood at Wayne Houston's Stoney Creek Horse Farm near Mooreland, Ind. of symbolic value where, in the absence of any strict compositional bond, volumes and forms--some of them gigantic--break free in the individual imagination of the viewer. This receptive condition seems explicitly linked to the type of installation Tirelli creates, which is extremely effective and completely consonant with the works themselves. He presents severely and hieratically subdued "stagings" in which the canvases are arranged according to a classical, almost Olympian rhythm and within which all perceptual ambiguities, which tend to throw the viewer's glance off balance, can be resolved. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

`myələs)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion