Maurizio Vetrugno: Carbone. To.Entering the gallery, the viewer was blinded by the light reflected from a wall covered in silver fabric and embroidered em·broi·der v. em·broi·dered, em·broi·der·ing, em·broi·ders v.tr. 1. To ornament with needlework: embroider a pillow cover. 2. with threads of the same color. The images they formed turned out to be symbols associated with Captain Beefheart Don Van Vliet (born Don Glen Vliet on January 15 1941, in Glendale, California, U.S.) is a musician and visual artist, best known by the pseudonym Captain Beefheart. and His Magic Band, of all people--leaves, snakes, and spirals that wrap themselves around the names of the band members, decorations that brought to mind the elaborate initials of illuminated manuscripts This is a list of illuminated manuscripts; that is, illustrated or decorated manuscripts. see also List of manuscripts 2nd Century
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The iridescence iridescence (ĭr'ədĕs`əns), exhibition of rainbowlike colors on a surface. It usually results from interference when light composed of different wavelengths is reflected from the superficial layers of organic or inorganic substances, of the wall covering reflected the colors of the embroidered paintings and, in the scenes of Morocco, conveyed the clear light of the Mediterranean. The images form a sort of diary of symbolic Moroccan places: the cannon in Essaouira, the port town where Orson Welles shot Othello in the early '50s; an aerial view of Marrakech; a Delacroix drawing of a young Moroccan man; a Marrakech hotel "inspired by" Jimi Hendrix Noun 1. Jimi Hendrix - United States guitarist whose innovative style with electric guitars influenced the development of rock music (1942-1970) Hendrix, James Marshall Hendrix ; the vacation homes of fashion designers Yves St. Laurent and Pierre Balmain Pierre Alexandre Claudius Balmain (b. St. Jean de Maurienne, France, May 18, 1914 – Paris, France, June 29, 1982) was a French fashion designer. Known for sophistication and elegance, he said that "dressmaking is the architecture of movement. ; a cybercafe The first Internet cafe in the U.S. Founded in 1995 in New York, the menu is a selection of fine coffees and desserts along with Internet, e-mail, printing, scanning and faxing services. Hats, shirts and jackets are also available for purchase. . The use of embroidery emphasizes the Orientalism of this lightning-quick literary and artistic history tour and, enhancing the tactility of the figures, creates an imaginary three-dimensionality. In the second room, the compositions became more rarefied rar·e·fied also rar·i·fied adj. 1. Belonging to or reserved for a small select group; esoteric. 2. Elevated in character or style; lofty. rarefied Adjective 1. . The wall with the scarves mimicked abstract painting without, however, actually becoming abstract; on the other wall, the black-and-white fashion photos had a pearly tinge--an effect inspired by what sometimes happens when black-and-white photos are copied on a color copy machine. The aura of preciousness that Vetrugno cultivates becomes a key to the dialogue between art and decoration as well as between anonymity and the renown of contemporary stars, be they famous models, singers, or fashion designers--those "Saints and Sinners," as the exhibition title would have it. Vetrugno's pictorial process is based on the study of all variants of embroidery; executed on the computer in the case of the symbols that decorate the wall covering, done by hand in the Morocco paintings, and simply taken as it exists in the case of the silk scarves, which could thus be considered corrected and modified readymades. The fact that the embroideries are worked out and designed by the artist but executed by others emphasizes exchange, also found in the process of cutting and pasting when we are writing or composing images on the computer. Vetrugno's embroideries enthrall with the primary attraction of the manual process within a contemporary artistic language and reconnect to the grand tradition of tapestry, which in the palaces of old acted as a backdrop for paintings, combining with stucco stucco (stŭk`ō), in architecture, a term loosely applied to various kinds of plasterwork, both exterior and interior. It now commonly refers to a plaster or cement used for the external coating of buildings, most frequently employed in work to help make an all-encompassing artwork of the space itself. Translated from Italian by Marguerite Shore. |
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