LONDON.- Tornabuoni Art is hosting the first London solo show of Italian abstract painter Piero Dorazio (1927 2005) in a generation. The exhibition spans 35 years of the artists career, from his early, cubist-inspired paintings to his large-scale abstract explosions of colour. It also retraces Dorazios influences, from Giacomo Balla to the Abstract Expressionists whom he met during his numerous stays in the USA. In his lifetime, Dorazio was widely exhibited internationally, including at MOMA New York and at the Venice Biennale, where an entire room was devoted to his paintings in 1960.
The exhibition at Tornabuoni Art presents monumental paintings from the 1970s, whose large format illustrates the influence of Dorazios various stays in the United States and his meetings with Robert Motherwell, Willem de Kooning and Barnett Newman there. As well as being exhibited in the iconic Responsive Eye exhibition at MOMA in 1965, with artists such as Bridget Riley, Dorazio spent the 1960s living between Italy and the US and teaching at the Graduate School of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania. It is therefore unsurprising that French art historian Serge Lemoine credits Dorazio with allowing Italian art to break out of its provincialism [and] reconnect with its illustrious past.
When Giorgio de Chirico teased the young Roman artist about not knowing how to draw shadows, Dorazio replied: I know, but I want to paint light! Beginning with his early works as part of Gruppo Origine founded in Rome in 1951 along with Alberto Burri, Ettore Colla and Giuseppe Capogrossi among others Dorazio always placed light at the centre of his paintings. He diffracted it, overlaying pale and dark hues and cold and warm tones of more or less glossy paint to create an overall impression that the artist himself described as an indefinable coloured light.
Dorazios preoccupation with the representation of light through paint can be traced to his discovery of the work of Giacomo Balla in 1951, who had been all but forgotten after the Second World War. The artist, who was also a prominent art critic, helped re-establish Ballas reputation, all the while following in the masters footsteps. Dorazios early works from 1956 and 1958, which are part of the Tornabuoni show are indeed reminiscent of Ballas divisionist technique, and in particular of his famous Street Light (dated 1909) as Dorazio uses contrasting strokes of light and dark colour to create the effect of a relief made of light and shadow.
Dorazios depiction of light becomes more distinctive and more abstract as his paintings rid themselves of any motif, accent or reference point and in 1958 become what he calls luminous textures interwoven wefts of light and colour. The Reticoli, as the series is known, are among the most iconic of Dorazios works and were exhibited in a room entirely dedicated to the artists work at the 1960 Venice Biennale. With a regular pattern of never-ending criss-crossing lines, the Reticoli echo the concerns of the pan-European New Tendencies movement that brought together groups of artists who favoured structure over composition, as well as simple shapes, repetition and a neutral execution. Dorazios work was exhibited in the movements founding exhibition of concrete and constructive art: Novje Tendecije in Zagreb in 1961.
With Piero Dorazio: Chromatic Fantasies (1948-1982) Tornabuoni aims to introduce to the London public one of the great painters of the Italian Post-War era, whose interpretation of colour and dedication to light and abstraction led to his being remembered in his obituary from The Guardian as a member of the heroic Post-War generation, who believed that abstract art could change the world.
Piero Dorazio was born in Rome in 1927. After brief studies in architecture, he quickly turned to the visual arts, particularly painting.
Leaving figuration behind at the age of 20, he co-authored the Forma I manifesto in 1947 with Pietro Conagra, Achille Perelli, Carla Accardi and Giulio Turcato. Strongly inspired by Futurism and expressing leftist political views, the manifesto contrasted with the ideals of Socialist Realism, as illustrated by Renato Guttuso. It marked Dorazios full embrace of abstract art, and served as a guideline for the rest of his career.
In the 1950s, Dorazio began collaborating with several art journals, and writing as an art critic. He published The Fantasy of Art in Modern Life (1955), and worked as a lecturer and exhibition manager, until becoming the official critic for the Corriere della Sera newspaper in 1984.
Dorazios highly experimental approach to art took him from Cubism to Futurism, always with bright, contrasting colours. In 1951, Dorazio discovered the work of Giacomo Balla and helped resurrect the artists reputation by bringing his work to New York. Inspired by Ballas work on Divisionism earlier in the century, Dorazio began creating meshes, overlapping chromatic structures reinventing both space and surface.
In 1960, Dorazio had a room dedicated to his work at the Venice Biennale and embarked on a series of formative journeys to France, where he met Braque, Arp, Léger and Le Corbusier, and to the United States, where he started frequenting the studios of major artists from the New York School, such as Hans Richter, Robert Motherwell, Willem De Kooning and Jackson Pollock.
His paintings were again exhibited at the Venice Biennale in 1966. Today, many are housed in the collections of major European museums in Italy, France, Switzerland, England and the USA.