Michelangelo Pistoletto: Origins and Consequences

Michelangelo Pistoletto: Origins and Consequences

Mazzoleni

Michelangelo Pistoletto, Dono di Mercurio allo Specchio, 1971.

September 10, 2018
Michelangelo Pistoletto
Origins and Consequences
September 27–December 15, 2018
Private view: September 26, 6–8pm
Mazzoleni
15 Old Bond Street
London W1S 4X
UK
Hours: Monday–Friday 10am–6pm

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Curated by Alberto Fiz

Mazzoleni is pleased to announce the exhibition Michelangelo Pistoletto: Origins and Consequences curated by Alberto Fiz, which will open to the public on September 27, 2018 and continue until the December 15. Collating artworks from various private collections, this exhibition will focus on a selection of works spanning from 1958 to 2012, and will feature early figurative oils on canvas, works in charcoal on paper, acrylic, wood, bronze and glass, alongside silkscreens on stainless steel—the renowned “mirror works” that defines his oeuvre.

Pistoletto is one of the most distinguished figures within the Arte Povera movement. The exhibition will examine Pistoletto’s early experimental period and elucidate the techniques that led to his mature work. It will feature three rare oil paintings on canvas depicting male portraits, including L’uomo nero, 1959. These seminal works should be viewed as the hereditary seat of Pistoletto’s visual language; an arresting exploration of portraiture as well as an important precursor to the artist’s series of self-portraits on a reflective black background—his first works to explore the reflective device.

Pistoletto presented his first solo show in 1960 at Galleria Galatea in Turin. That same year he made several life-sized self-portraits on gold, silver and copper monochrome backgrounds. In 1962, he initiated the use of reflective materials by applying painted and later photographic-silkscreened images to highly-polished stainless steel, the “mirror works” that have earned him an enduring international artistic reputation. What animates the “mirror paintings” is the duality of a fixed photo image placed on the surface of a reflective steel plate and the moving images produced by reflections of the viewer and their environment. The performative element of the works is completed by the observer who becomes the central protagonist.

Pistoletto comments of his work, “It suggested a double projection, into the wall and out into the space of the viewer. In a way it integrated painting and sculpture.” This is true of Dono di Mercurio allo Specchio (Mercury’s Gift to the Mirror), 1971, where a bronze statue of Venus is strategically placed by a mirror. Pistoletto forces the viewer to stand alongside Venus, judged to be the most beautiful woman of the classical world and enter into a visual dialogue. The poetry of the mundane is once more elevated, echoing Pistoletto’s renowned Art Povera work, Venus of Rags, 1967. However, in this case it is the viewer who is installed in its place. In Donna con lampada, 1974, a silkscreen of a photographic image on stainless steel, a technique perfected in 1971, the drama of the piece is heightened by an image of photographer’s assistant (his wife) holding a lamp. The work is from a series produced with photographer Paolo Mussat Sartor, Pistoletto’s long-term collaborator in Turin, where the photographer and his wife became Pistoletto’s subjects—a photography shoot within a photography shoot.

Further works from the ‘80s, ‘90s and from the last two decades, will also be presented, including “black” works such as Specchio Nero (Black Mirror), 1961–89, a wood and glass work, where the artist explores the “dark” reflection and contrasts the light with the void.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with an essay in English and Italian by Alberto Fiz.

Press contact
Alana Pryce Tojcic
press [​at​] mazzoleniart.com / T +44 7940420631

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September 10, 2018

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