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Thursday, November 27, 2025 |
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| MAXXI presents Frame Time Open, Italy's most extensive Rosa Barba retrospective |
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Rosa Barba, Frame Time Open. Installation view at MAXXI. Photo: Andrea Rossetti; courtesy lartista, Esther Schipper, Vistamare.
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ROME.- MAXXI National Museum of 21st Century Arts presents Frame Time Open, the most comprehensive solo exhibition ever held in Italy dedicated to Rosa Barba (Agrigento, 1972), one of the countrys most internationally acclaimed and influential contemporary artists.
Curated by Francesco Stocchi, the exhibition highlights over twenty years of the artists research through a selection of her most significant sculptural works and films, including two new productions created specifically for this project and premiering at MAXXI.
With Frame Time Open - developed in close collaboration with the artist, who also conceived the exhibition design - MAXXIs spaces transform into an architectural notation of rhythmic interconnections through, film, language, sound and light. Maria Emanuela Bruni, President of Fondazione MAXXI: «MAXXI was conceived as an observatory of the present, a place where contemporary languages intersect with cultural legacies and future visions. Rosa Barbas work exemplifies this mission: drawing on the cinematic tradition, her creations become true architectures of moving light, capable of investigating time, memory and reality».
Francesco Stocchi, MAXXI Artistic Director and exhibition curator: «Frame Time Open reflects the visionary scope of Rosa Barbas research, transforming MAXXI into a dynamic landscape where cinema, sculpture, and light redefine our perception of time. Through a journey that stages more than twenty years of her practice, the exhibition celebrates one of the most original voices in contemporary art, offering visitors a unique experience that weaves together formal innovation and conceptual depth».
Rosa Barbas research, positioned between cinema, literature, and science, explores time as both a physical and conceptual material.
The exhibition at MAXXI offers a comprehensive overview of her continuously evolving artistic methodology and reaffirms her position as a pioneering figure in contemporary visual art, celebrating her distinctive approach to time in her words: «considered as an accumulation of events rather than a linear progression - and to cinema as a spatial and temporal dimension».
The exhibition layout, designed by Barba in response to Zaha Hadids spaces, is conceived as a three-dimensional score, an artwork-display on intervowen tracks which extends like a drawing across Galleria 2 and responds sensitively to the architecture, making the exhibition a unique and site-specific experience.
A large steel and plexiglass framework presents 24 works created between 2009 and 2025, arranged along an open route with three distinct access points.
Cinematic elements become autonomous fragments that also emphasize the interdependency of each. Time unfolds in a circular flow of light, rhythm, and transparency, while sound amplifies the exhibitions synesthetic dimension.
In the exhibition, works such as As Fixed in Flux (2025) and Solar Flux Recordings (2022),) reveal time as a sculptural material; while Stating the Real Sublime (2009) and A Shark Well Governed (2017) play with conceptual ideas.
Color Clocks (2012) and Color Studies (2013) explore color as a measure of perception; Hear, There, Where the Echoes Are (2016/2025) activates the whole exhibition through sound interferences and Off Splintered Time (2021) transforms film into continuous movement.
At the heart of the project are two new productions.
Myth and Mercury (2025) is a new 35mm film co-commissioned by MAXXI and CAM Centro de Arte Moderna Gulbenkian and co-produced by Fondazione In Between Art Film and Hamburger Kunsthalle. Starting from the Gramscis prison diaries, Barba explores the Mediterranean as a blueprint of transformation, alongside the inner working of the entangled energies that are visible and invisible to us.
They Are Taking All My Letters (2025) is a kinetic sculpture composed of steel, acrylic, aluminium, LEDs, motors, and 34 vertical strips of 70mm celluloid film in constant motion, printed with white text on a black background drawn from writings by Susan Howe, Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, and the artist herself. The continuously shifting phrases generate ever- new linguistic combinations, reflecting on time, intermittent light, and the translation of language into image.
The exhibition at MAXXI inaugurates an international project that will unfold in a new site specific exhibition at the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon (May 2026).
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Today's News
November 27, 2025
Three new Miami Art Week exhibitions illuminate narratives around migration, culture, and community
Piguet unveils a ferocious Late Cretaceous sea monster
Tim Van Laere Gallery opens major Franz West survey highlighting his radical sculptural legacy
Juan Uslé returns to the Reina Sofía with a landmark four-decade survey
Rob Lyon makes his New York debut at Hales with When There Were More Moons
The Jim Henson Company 70th Anniversary Auction brings in $2.6 million total at Julien's Auctions
MAXXI presents Frame Time Open, Italy's most extensive Rosa Barba retrospective
Andrew Browne: 'A kind of skin' now open at Tolarno Galleries
Thomas Hoepker's hidden East Germany comes to light in new Berlin exhibition
Cristea Roberts Gallery unveils Paula Rego's darkest, most personal works from 2005-2007
Philbrook presents first career retrospective for Tulsa artist Patrick Gordon
Gooding Christie's to offer the Curtis Leaverton Collection at 2026 Amelia Island Auctions
Tuula Lehtinen revives Baroque splendor in new exhibition at Galerie Forsblom
Shu Lea Cheang's radical digital worlds take center stage at Ludwig Forum Aachen
Farida Sedoc unveils monumental Social Capital triptych at the Stedelijk Museum
Duane Linklater reimagines museum structures with powerful 'cache' installation at the Secession
The Met to offer holiday experience featuring festive displays, dining, shopping, and more
Joel Sherwood Spring debuts Diggermode 2: Cloud Ceding at the Institute of Modern Art
South Australian artists in focus as AGSA announces 2026 exhibition program
MAAT-Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology presents tenth-anniversary programme
'A Minute of Shelter' by Narges Mohammadi unveiled in Rotterdam
Kevork Mourad unveils Memory Gates at Miami Basel Meridians with Leila Heller Gallery
National Gallery of Canada opens its first cross-cultural exhibition of Indigenous, Canadian settler and European art
Sale to offer photographic masterworks from an important private collection
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