Tumgik
#Galleria Enrico Astuni
garadinervi · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
Maurizio Nannucci, Art, (neon in red, yellow and blue Murano glass), 1990 [Galleria Enrico Astuni, Bologna. © Maurizio Nannucci]
Tumblr media
24 notes · View notes
pikasus-artenews · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
MAURIZIO MOCHETTI. Scatola del tempo Maurizio Mochetti ha concepito la mostra Scatola del tempo come un’unica grande installazione a partire dal dialogo tra dieci opere realizzate nel corso degli ultimi dieci anni (2012-2022)
0 notes
distinktionsfetzen · 30 days
Photo
Tumblr media
Check out Suzanne Lacy, The Crystal Quilt Portfolio (1987/2023), From Galleria Enrico Astuni
0 notes
herbstsalonpfp · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Artissima 2022, a short selection: Alberto Garutti Sehensucht Galleria Enrico Astuni #artissima #artissima2022 #contemporaryart #turin #installation #albertogarutti #galleriaenricoastuni #sehensucht (hier: Oval Lingotto) https://www.instagram.com/p/CkloSOyoKpS/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
thinkingimages · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
BROKEN FALL (GEOMETRIC) 11 April – 10 July 2010
Curated by Giovanni Iovane & Alessandra Pace
c/o GALLERIA ENRICO ASTUNI Via Iacopo Barozzi 3 – 40126 Bologna Italy
http://www.galleriaastuni.com
Falling is a metaphor and also a recurrent practice of modernity. The act of falling bares nuances and accents, which differ from the more generalist act of flying. The modernist flight implies in fact the conceptualization of the void; a non-performative presentation flavoured with a pinch of romanticism, as in the renowned photograph depicting Yves Klein who leaps into the void. Falling entails instead psychological complications—the ghost of failure lurks amongst us since over a century— but is also something inherent to the artistic act, which supposes a trajectory, a direction, an insistence on gravity and, most of all, the focus on an event, which adds or substitutes something to our daily panorama. According to Jean-Paul Sartre, the first Western artist to depict an actual fall—that is, a solid body with a specific weight dropping through space—was Tintoretto. The painting that initiates the representation of weightiness, and even of the moral effects of gravity, is The Miracle of the Slave (1547-48). Here the Saint does not flutter in the empty sky, but rather dashes head down (like Superman, Sartre acutely points out) aiming directly at the centre of the painting; it is no longer a simple flight but an actual geometric fall. A few years after Tintoretto’s picture Bruegel the Elder paints the Fall of Icarus (1555). Despite the title and subject of the painting, the artist essentially paints a landscape. In this landscape we can immediately detect a peasant at work and a ship in the foreground. But we strain to spot falling Icarus, and only after closer inspection do we notice two small legs about to plunge in the sea, which represent the event. Within a few years, the geometry of the fall appears both in its full plasticity (Tintoretto) and also in its conceptual and moral irrelevance (Bruegel). With the eyes of modernity (and of modernism) the fall head-down and those two small reversed legs still come across as marking the essential “positions” of the geometric fall. Of course the 20th C has added its own alterations, which are psychological, sentimental, or ostentatiously process-based. Yet these additions and supplements were already unexpectedly contained in the etymology of the word “to fail”: i.e. to deceive, to fall, to falter. Things occur and lapse after a more or less brief flight. The aspiration, or the object of desire, is no longer the leap—and the state of flight itself— but rather the act of the repeated fall, this time to the ground and moved by a precise intention (with the only exception of a romantic and deceptive leap into the void).
In an experimental film by Hans Richter from 1926, Vormittagsspuck, ante-meridian ghosts and dropping objects fall in a disorderly sequence. The fall, with a subtle and intricate analysis of its more or less vertical dynamism, becomes the fundamental “locus” of Buster Keaton’s films. Such intentional act with its precise geometries is taken on by a sphere of action, which includes for example Samuel Beckett, Barnett Newman’s paintings, and in the 1970′s a series of films by Bas Jan Ader devoted to the fall. Broken Fall (Geometric), a film dated 1971, can be adopted as symbol or manifesto for this intent, or perhaps wish of the artist, to present a direction, a precise target—even if “delayed” in Keatonesque-style—as a way of making room by means of an event, according to the laws of gravity and body mass. Whereas in Bas Jan Ader’s work it is the human body, in line with a history and tradition of performance art, which marks the geometry of the fall, in Bruce Nauman’s (late 60′s) or John Baldessari’s (early 70′s) it is a bouncing ball which offers the possibility of a straight line or other geometric figures—with an apparent and ironical overtake of Barnett Newman’s vertical lines—which inevitably recalls Icarus’ reversed legs.
In the last decades, the fall or hybrids of the flight with endpoints, such as levitation, have turned into yet more ghosts of Modernism.
They are spectres that testify to the survival in the contemporary visual panorama and in popular visual culture of the persistence of enquiry tools, which aim to determine what happens when something falls—or what would occur if something fell—on a specific point defined in space. Within this domain, as far as the human body is concerned, Bruce Nauman in his studio certainly provides a source of observation and experimentation. Acrobats and tightrope walkers have returned on the contemporary scene to defy the obsession with failure and the possibility of falling (an example is the documentary film Man on Wire, 2008). The homage to the modernist ghost of Klein suspended in the act of flying can ironically—and anthropologically, Michel Foucault would say—multiply itself in a series of “found” images of levitation (a subtle response to the active role that Marcel Duchamp assigned to the spectator in completing the work of art). The geometric fall can lead to the suspension (also of disbelief) in mid-air of some leaves, or of the social anxiety entailed in the fact of being placed on a precarious pedestal. Relating to the element of “deception” imbued in the etymology of the term suspension in flight (sub = from below + pendere = hang)—which lends itself to a supplementary inquiry that questions the force of gravity— a vast repertoire of objects persistently decline to fall to the ground. Finally, the geometric fall is also a matter of technique, which from Tintoretto to Jackson Pollock concerns the position of the painting in relation to dripping (and falling) paint.
Exhibited artists: Mario Airò, John Baldessari, Simone Berti, Hugo Canoilas, Gino De Dominicis, Rainer Ganahl, Susan Hiller, Tim Lee, Cristiano Mangione, Bruce Nauman, João Penalva, Superflex
Film screening: Bas Jan Ader, Hans Richter
15 notes · View notes
stefanowpasquini · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#Untitled #12 #February #2022 #GalleriaEnricoAstuni #FabioCavallucci (at Galleria Enrico Astuni, Bologna) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZ4qVMXMGuK/?utm_medium=tumblr
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Raccontare un luogo - (Tales of a Place): otto artisti sul concetto di site-specific
Otto artisti di livello internazionale - Mario Airò, Mel Bochner, Cuoghi Corsello, Christian Jankowski, Suzanne Lacy, Maurizio Nannucci, Antonis Pittas, Nedko Solakov - si interrogano sul confronto tra differenti concetti di luogo e sulla relazione tra spazio immaginato, spazio percorso e la presenza dello spettatore, con opere realizzate appositamente per la collettiva Raccontare un luogo - (Tales of a Place), curata da Lorenzo Bruni.
Scritte in neon, serie di disegni, installazioni sonore, video, fotografie, in mostra a Bologna presso la Galleria Enrico Astuni fino al 7 novembre 2015
0 notes
garadinervi · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
Maurizio Nannucci, Love, (Neon in blue, red, yellow, and green Murano glass), 1987 [Galleria Enrico Astuni, Bologna. © Maurizio Nannucci]
Tumblr media
18 notes · View notes
stefanowpasquini · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#Untitled #20 #November #2021 #NedkoSolakov (at Galleria Enrico Astuni, Bologna) https://www.instagram.com/p/CWgeualMH5L/?utm_medium=tumblr
0 notes
stefanowpasquini · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#Untitled #11 #April #2019 #SpaziDiLibertá #UgoLaPietra (at Galleria Enrico Astuni, Bologna) https://www.instagram.com/p/BwH3oKalbRb/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=11aaq3sb4b7he
0 notes
pikasus-artenews · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
QUATTRO IDEE. Øystein Aasan, Peter Halley, Jonathan Monk, Maurizio Nannucci
Alla Galleria Enrico Astuni, Bologna, quattro artisti di generazioni e nazionalità diverse propongono quattro diverse idee sul proprio lavoro e sul ruolo dell’arte al tempo si oggi.
0 notes
stefanowpasquini · 10 years
Link
Visualizza nel browser/View in the browser
GALLERIA ENRICO ASTUNI è lieta di invitarvi / GALLERIA ENRICO ASTUNI is pleased to invite you
IN OCCASIONE DI
MAGGIO D'ARTE A BOLOGNA, passeggiando tra le gallerie  
GALLERIA ENRICO ASTUNI  Vi aspetta GIOVEDì 29.05 dalle ore 20 Free cocktail e musica in galleria fino alle ore 22.30 ORE 21 Gile Bae in concerto 
Pianista classica già riconosciuta a livello internazionale, dal suo repertorio musiche di Johan Sebastian Bach, Ludwig van Beethoven, Johannes Brahms, Frederic Chopin, Edward Grieg, Joseph Haydn, Felix Mendelssohn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Sergej Prokofiev, Robert Schumann
La mostra in corso Guarda dove vai
JANIS AVOTINS, FRANZ BAUMGARDNER, LUIGI CARBONI, MILENA DRAGICEVIC, THOMAS FLORSHUEZ, ALDO GIANNOTTI, IZUMI KATO, CRISTIANO MANGIONE, PAOLO PARISI, STEFANO W. PASQUINI, LUCA POZZI, DAVID SHAW,  MIKE SILVA, THOMAS ZIPP
Galleria Enrico Astuni Guarda dove vai
8 maggio – 8 giugno 2014 Aperture speciali con evento free ogni giovedì di maggio (8 – 15 – 22 – 29) fino alle ore 22.30 Via Iacopo Barozzi 3, 40126, Bologna Per info: 051 4211132 Orari: Tutti i giorni dalle 9/13 – 15/19
Comunicato Stampa / Press release Maggio d'arte a Bologna
www.gilebae.com
Copyright © Galleria Enrico Astuni, Tutti i diritti riservati / All right reserved Hai ricevuto questa email perché sei iscritto alla nostra newsletter/You are receiving this email because you are subscribed to our newsletter. GALLERIA ENRICO ASTUNI Via Iacopo Barozzi, 3 40126 Bologna Email: [email protected] Website: http://ift.tt/1ti0VaK Tel.: +39 051 4211132 Fax: +39 051 4211242  
http://ift.tt/1jWp99H
0 notes