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Showing posts with label CAROL RAMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CAROL RAMA. Show all posts

9.6.16

ART BASEL 2016 | ISABELLA BORTOLOZZI GALERIE

Oscar Murillo, Human Resources, 2015-2016



Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi
is pleased to announce
participation at Art Basel 2016

Main Fair
Booth M6 Hall 2.1

Ed Atkins
Bepi Ghiotti
Anne Imhof
Oscar Murillo
Calla Henkel & Max Pitegoff
Carol Rama
Stephen G. Rhodes
Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys


Art Basel
Basel, June 16–19, 2016
artbasel.com

Image: Oscar Murillo, Human Resources, 2015-2016
Oil and oil stick on canvas with eyelets, steel poles, steel brackets, steel cable ties, 340 x 330 x 30 cm
Photo: Matthew Hollow


Main Fair
Booth M6 Hall 2.1


ED ATKINS

BEPI GHIOTTI
ANNE IMHOF
OSCAR MURILLO
CELLA HEN & MAX PTGOFF
CAROL RAMA
SEPHEN RODES


25.11.15

ENNESIMA | TRIENNALE OF MILAN






Vettor Pisani, L'eroe da camera. Tutte le parole dal silenzio di Duchamp al Rumore di Beuys (The Hero chamber. All the words from the silence of Duchamp to the Noise of Beuys), 1972.*





Ennesima. An Exhibition of Seven Exhibitions on Italian Art
November 26, 2015–March 6, 2016

Triennale of Milan
Viale Alemagna, 6
20121 Milan
Italy 

Triennale di Milano presents Ennesima. An Exhibition of Seven Exhibitions on Italian Art, curated by Vincenzo de Bellis, with the artistic direction of Edoardo Bonaspetti, curator of Triennale Arte. Not “one” exhibition of Italian art but, literally, an "exhibition of exhibitions" that, via seven paths, tries to explore the last 50 years of contemporary art in Italy, collecting more than 120 works and over 70 artists, from the early sixties through to the present day, in a display extending over the whole first floor of the Milan Triennale.

The title is inspired by a work by Giulio Paolini, Ennesima (appunti per la descrizione di sette tele datate 1973), the first version of which, dated 1973, is divided into seven paintings. This gives the number of exhibition projects included in de Bellis's exhibition for La Triennale: seven independent exhibitions, in the form of notes or suggestions that explore different aspects, links, coincidences and discrepancies, as well as the exhibition grammar in the recent history of Italian art.

Seven working hypotheses through which we can read, reinterpret and tell Italian art also through the analysis of some of the possible exhibition formats: from the solo exhibition to the site-specific installation, through to the thematic group show and chronological group show, the group exhibition on artistic movement and the medium-based group exhibition and on to the archive exhibition.

The path of Ennesima starts therefore with the thematic group exhibition entitled To Write an image, focused on the analysis of the centrality of iconography in the Italian artistic production from the sixties through to the present day, to continue with the group exhibition on an artistic movement entitled The image of writing: Group 70, visual poetry and verbal-visual investigations and dedicated to Visual Poetry, and then with Alessandro Pessoli: Sandrinus, the whole before the parts, the artist’s first solo exhibition in an Italian public institution. Central hub of the path is the medium-based exhibition The Performance Where Time Stands Still: Tableau Vivant between Reality and Representation​, hinging on performance, with the objective of presenting an analysis of its development by focusing on the tableau vivant sub-genre, followed by A Choral Archive: The via Lazzaro Palazzi Space, the Experience of Self-Management and AVANBLOB, the exhibition of documents that, 25 years later, pays homage to the activities of the artists working in Milan proposing a first attempt at historization. 2015: present time, indefinite mood, a generation-based exhibition ends the path, revolving around a selection of artists born between the mid-seventies and eighties. The whole project is finally studded with site-specific interventions at crucial points of the exhibition path, gathered under the title of Here, Now and Elsewhere: Site-specific and Thereabouts, that fit transversely in respect of the other six exhibitions.


Artists:
Vincenzo Accame, Vincenzo Agnetti, Alessandro Agudio, Mario Airò, Yuri Ancarani, Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Francesco Arena, Stefano Arienti, Massimo Bartolini, Gianfranco Baruchello, Vanessa Beecroft, Alighiero Boetti, Monica Bonvicini, Lupo Borgonovo, Ugo Carrega, Elisabetta Catalano, Maurizio Cattelan, Giuseppe Chiari, Francesco Clemente, Roberto Cuoghi, Danilo Correale, Gino De Dominicis, Patrizio Di Massimo, Luciano Fabro, Lara Favaretto, Vincenzo Ferrari, Linda Fregni Nagler, Giuseppe Gabellone, Alberto Garutti, Francesco Gennari, Paolo Gioli, Massimo Grimaldi, Adelita Husni-Bey, Emilio Isgrò, Jannis Kounellis, Ketty La Rocca, Via Lazzaro Palazzi Space (Mario Airò, Vincenzo Buonaguro, Matteo Donati, Stefano Dugnani, Giuseppina Mele, Chiyoko Miura, Liliana Moro, Andrea Rabbiosi, Bernhard Rüdiger, Antonello Ruggieri, Adriano Trovato, Massimo Uberti, Francesco Voltolina), Marcello Maloberti, Lucia Marcucci, Nicola Martini, Fabio Mauri, Mario Merz, Marisa Merz, Eugenio Miccini, Luca Monterastelli, Liliana Moro, Maurizio Nannucci, Alek O., Martino Oberto, Luigi Ontani, Luciano Ori, Giulio Paolini, Pino Pascali, Diego Perrone, Alessandro Pessoli, Lamberto Pignotti, Vettor Pisani, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Paola Pivi, Luigi Presicce, Carol Rama, Pietro Roccasalva, Andrea Romano, Gianni Emilio Simonetti, Rudolf Stingel, Santo Tolone, Franco Vaccari, Francesco Vezzoli, Luca Vitone

 

*Vettor Pisani, L'eroe da camera. Tutte le parole dal silenzio di Duchamp al Rumore di Beuys(The Hero chamber. All the words from the silence of Duchamp to the Noise of Beuys), 1972. Collection Mimma Pisani. Courtesy Elisabetta Catalano Archive. Photo: Elisabetta Catalano.



LaTriennale_orizz.jpg


Art_prospect

3.4.15

CAROL RAMA | MUSEE D'ART MODERNE PARIS


LA PASSION SELON CAROL RAMA

03 APRIL - 12 JULY 2015



The Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris is presenting France's first retrospective devoted to Italian artist Carol Rama. Long sidelined by art history and the feminist movement, Rama's work ranges through all the avant-garde movements of the 20th century while defying any pigeonholing. The ferocity of an oeuvre oscillating between abstraction and figuration calls on us to take a fresh look at official art currents and established categories



The Passion according to Carol Rama offers an overview of a multi-faceted body of work, its scenography taking the form of a fragmented 'anatomy' that combines the chronological and the thematic in a thoroughgoing revelation of Rama's obsessive complexity.

This is a hybrid oeuvre in which subject and medium coalesce, from mouth/watercolour to penis-breast/rubber and eye/bricolage. A seeming jumble of themes and materials, Rama's different series in fact come together as a coherent whole, tackling notions like madness, fetishism, ordure, abjectness, pleasure, animality and death.


Born into a traditional Catholic bourgeois family in Turin in 1918, this self-taught artist has said, 'I've never needed a model for my painting; the sense of sin is my teacher.' Beginning with the early 1930s watercolours that caused censorship clashes, she developed a distinctive visual system at odds with normative, male-dominated modernism. In 1950 her work took an abstract turn, moving towards a personal, organic vision of Concrete Art. Twenty years later she began using strips cut from bicycle tyres as sensual, minimalist 'image material'. In 1980 she reverted to figuration with watercolours painted on architectural illustrations. Her most recent major series, dating from the 2000s, takes its inspiration from mucca pazza (mad cow disease) and consists of provocative rubber compositions that could be termed 'queer Arte Povera'.


In contrast with the artist’s light-filled studio, Rama’s apartment is a dark, skilfully arranged room, home to a plethora of portraits, other works and odds and ends: her raw materials, primitive and religious statuettes and pop items. Chosen with Maria Cristina Mundici (Archivio Carol Rama), a selection of objects sets up a dialogue here with Bepi Ghiotti’s photographs installation of thecasa studio. The background soundtrack by Paolo Curtoni is a mix of sounds from the apartment and recordings of the artist’s voice.











Despite a solitary, eccentric existence far removed from movements and the fashionable, Rama has always mixed with artists and intellectuals, among them Carlo Mollino, Edoardo Sanguineti, Lea Vergine, Man Ray, Pasolini and Andy Warhol. She now appears as a figure crucial to any understanding of the representational changes in the art of the 20th century. Winner of the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale in 2003, she was shown there again in 2013, and her work has become the focus of intense interest on the part of museums, art historians and other artists.





Exhibition concieved by the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA) and the Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris (MAMVP), organized by the MACBA and coproduced with PARIS MUSÉES / MAMVP, EMMA – Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin (IMMA) and GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin.    
#ExpoCarolRama
Curator : Anne Dressen

































20.7.14

CAROL RAMA | DANH VO | NOTTINGHAM CONTEMPORARY


NOTTINGHAM CONTEMPORARY  |  19 Jul 2014 - 28 Sep 2014

Carol Rama, Untitled. 1971 – 2004. Private Collection  © Archivio Carol Rama, Turin
Carol Rama, Untitled. 1971 – 2004. Private Collection © Archivio Carol Rama, Turin

Carol Rama’s expressive work is a direct result of the personal tragedies in her life. “I paint to heal myself,” she has said. Her autobiographical, explicitly female approach mirrors that of other artists of her time, such as Louise Bourgeois. Considered too radical for the fascist dominated Italy she grew up in, her work didn’t receive international attention until the end of the 90s. She received the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the Venice Biennale in 2003, and her work is now shown in major art galleries around the world.
A self-taught artist, she began painting watercolours as a form of therapy. In 1933, when Rama was 15, her mother was admitted to a psychiatric clinic. She has stated that she began her “vulgar” drawings then, fascinated by the female patients who wandered the wards half naked. These transgressive, psychosexual images challenged state censorship, and her first exhibition, held in Turin in 1945, was shut down.
In the 60s she began to use psychologically charged objects in her work, including animal claws and doll’s eyes. This led to her celebrated paintings made from bicycle tyres in the 70s. Elegant, abstract and minimal, they were related to other important art of the time. Rama has said that she was attracted to the sensual, flesh like quality of rubber. The tyres also refer to the bicycle factory that her father owned. In 1942 he committed suicide after the factory failed and he was declared bankrupt.
This exhibition precedes a large touring retrospective of Carol Rama’s work initiated by MACBA in Barcelona and co-produced with the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Espoo Museum of Modern Art in Finland and the Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Torino (GAM). This smaller selection of work at Nottingham Contemporary, which focuses on the early watercolours, the bricolages, the tyre paintings and the most recent works on diagrams and plans, is presented in close dialogue with Danh Vo’s exhibition, and a few of Vo’s works are presented amongst Rama’s.

Danh Võ, installation view, Nottingham Contemporary 2014. Photo Andy Keate.
Danh Võ, installation view, Nottingham Contemporary 2014. Photo Andy Keate
This summer we present the first major UK exhibition of the work of Danh Võ. Võ’s work explores the intersections of personal experience and major historical events, including the impact and mutations of Catholicism as it spread through colonisation.
His artworks reflect on the paradoxes inherent in the construction of identity. His use of objects evokes the historical circumstances that shape contemporary life.
“I don’t believe that things come from within you. To me things come out of the continuous dialogue you have with your surroundings,” he has said.
Danh Võ was born on the island of Phu Quoc, in South Vietnam in 1975 and eventually granted political asylum in Denmark, where he was raised. Since 2009 Võ has been collaborating with his father, Phung Võ, a skilled calligrapher, who has made new works for the exhibition.


Inside Carol Rama (detail), 2012 – 2014 © Bepi Ghiotti
Inside Carol Rama (detail), 2012 – 2014 © Bepi Ghiotti
Inside Carol Rama is a series of 90 photographs taken by Bepi Ghiotti over the last two years in the legendary studio-home of Carol Rama. A selection of these works will be shown in The Study for the duration of her exhibition.Photographs of her legendary studio, taken by Bepi Ghiotti, will be shown in The Study, off Gallery 1.

In addition, Italian artist Chiara Fumai will present a new performance in homage to Carol Rama within the exhibition on Saturday 19 July, Wednesday 27 August and Sunday 28 September.

http://www.nottinghamcontemporary.org/art/carol-rama

4.7.14

CAROL RAMA | DANH VO | NOTTINGHAM CONTEMPORARY

july3_nottingham_img.jpg
Photo: Danh Võ, 2013. © Danh Võ and Archivio Carol Rama, Turin.
Carol Rama
Danh Võ
19 July–28 September 2014

Press preview: Friday 18 July, 11am–2pm
Opening: Friday 18 July, 6:30–9pm

Nottingham Contemporary
Weekday Cross
Nottingham NG1 2GB

www.nottinghamcontemporary.org
Winner of the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement at the 2003 Venice Biennale, Carol Rama is a self-taught Italian artist whose artistic career began in 1936. She lives in Turin to this day.

Much of Rama's work is a direct expression of the personal tragedies in her life. "I paint to heal myself," Rama has said. As a young woman in fascist Italy, Rama began painting watercolours as a form of therapy. Her delicate but transgressive psychosexual images challenged the modernist canon and state censorship. Sheremained underappreciated by the international art world until the 1990s.

In the 1960s she began to apply psychologically charged found objects to the painting surface, including animal claws and dolls eyes. This body of work, called Bricolages, led to her celebrated abstract works made from bicycle inner tubes in the 1970s. The strips of black, grey and orange-red rubber have a sensual, flesh-like quality in these elegant and minimal compositions. They also allude to her father's bicycle factory and the hardships that followed its closure.

Featuring 50 works, the exhibition presents a selection of her early watercolours and works from the Bricolage series including her tyre paintings. It precedes a large touring retrospective of Carol Rama's work initiated by MACBA in Barcelona and co-produced with the Musée d'Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Espoo Museum of Modern Art in Finland and the Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Torino (GAM).

Alongside Carol Rama, Nottingham Contemporary presents the first major UK exhibition by Danh Vō:

The next morning, he (the prince) went with it to the man, and said to him, "No one shall be my wife except for the one whose foot fits this golden shoe."
The two sisters were happy to hear this, for they had pretty feet. With her mother standing by, the older one took the shoe into her bedroom to try it on. She could not get her big toe into it, for the shoe was too small for her. Then her mother gave her a knife and said, "Cut off your toe. When you are queen you will no longer have to go on foot."
The girl cut off her toe, forced her foot into the shoe, swallowed the pain, and went out to the prince. He took her on his horse as his bride and rode away with her. 
(Excerpt from: The Brothers Grimm, Aschenputtel [Cinderella], 1812)


Danh Vō was born on the island of Phu Quoc, South Vietnam, in 1975 and eventually granted political asylum in Denmark, where he was raised. Vō, now a Mexican resident, has had solo exhibitions at the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, The Art Institute of Chicago and Kunsthalle Friedericianum in Kassel. In 2012 he won the HUGO BOSS PRIZE.




july3_nottingham_logo.jpg

15.11.12

CAROL RAMA | SPAZIO PIU' CHE TEMPO

ISABELLA BORTOLOZZI GALERIE  |  BERLIN
12.09.2012 -- 13.10.2012



Installation view: »Spazio Anche Piu Che Tempo«, A selection of works by Carol Rama from the 1930s to the 1980s, Isabella Bortolozzi Galerie, Berlin, 12.09.12—13.10.12
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin



»Spazio anche più che tempo«, 1970. Electric cable and glue on canvas
89 x 80 cm, framed: 102 x 92,3 x 7,1 cm. Unique.
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin


Installation view: »Spazio Anche Piu Che Tempo«, A selection of works by Carol Rama from the 1930s to the 1980s, Isabella Bortolozzi Galerie, Berlin, 12.09.12—13.10.12
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin


»Luogo e segni«, 1974. Mixed media and rubber on protective foil. 151 x 120 cm. Framed: 153,5 x 124 x 4,6 cm. Unique.
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin


Installation view: »Spazio Anche Piu Che Tempo«, A selection of works by Carol Rama from the 1930s to the 1980s, Isabella Bortolozzi Galerie, Berlin, 12.09.12—13.10.12
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin


Installation view: »Spazio Anche Piu Che Tempo«, A selection of works by Carol Rama from the 1930s to the 1980s, Isabella Bortolozzi Galerie, Berlin, 12.09.12—13.10.12
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin


»Smentire il bianco«, 1973. Rubber on canvas. 200 x 150 cm. Framed: 208,5 x 158,7 x 7 cm. Unique.
Carol Rama, spazio più che tempo, Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin