NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art honors Dante Ferretti (Italian, b. 1943) with a large-scale multimedia installation comprising a 12-screen labyrinth featuring projected scenes from his work; original set pieces from the films that earned him three Academy Awards; and a six-month retrospective of 22 films featuring the production designers career-defining work. Dante Ferretti: Design and Construction for the Cinema, on view from September 28, 2013, through February 9, 2014, features large-scale, original set pieces recovered from sets designed by Ferretti, including the chandeliers from Pier Paolo Pasolinis Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom (1975) and the massive, illuminated clock from Martin Scorseses Hugo (2011), as well as sculptural objects created for the Venice Film Festival. The centerpiece of the exhibition is a 12-screen labyrinth installed in the Roy and Niuta Titus theater lobby galleries, onto which designs from numerous Ferretti films will be projected. The film program, Dante Ferretti: Designing for the Big Screen, opens on September 25, 2013, and features 22 films in The Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters, including Scorseses Gangs of New York (2002), Tim Burtons Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007), and Federico Fellinis Ginger e Fred (1986), for which Dante Ferrettis sets helped to guide directorial practice with signature distinction. Presented in collaboration with Luce Cinecittà, Rome, both exhibitions are organized by Ron Magliozzi, Associate Curator, and Jytte Jensen, Curator, Department of Film, The Museum of Modern Art; with Antonio Monda, author and professor, New York University; and Marina Sagona, artist.
Since 1969 Ferretti has served as the production designer on over 50 feature films, 24 opera productions, and over a dozen television, museum, fashion, festival, and publication projects, working with the likes of fashion icon Valentino and directors Liliana Cavani and David Cronenberg, among others. His career-defining work has been done in collaboration with filmmakers Pier Paolo Pasolini, Federico Fellini, and Martin Scorsese. In Italy, North America, and Britain, he has also created designs with directors Luigi Comencini, Marco Ferreri, Elio Petri, Sergio Citti, Mario Camerini, Franco Zefferelli, Ettore Scola, Dino Risi, Marco Bellocchio, Luigi Zampa, Franco Brusati, Luciano Salce, Tim Burton, Brian DePalma, Terry Gilliam, Julie Taymor, Jean-Jacques Annaud, Martin Brest, Neil Jordan, and Anthony Minghella. He has won three British BAFTAs, several Italian David Di Donatello, and three Academy Awards for Best Art Direction (plus seven additional nominations).
Dante Ferretti: Design and Construction for the Cinema examines design practice for film through the lens of Ferrettis work, which is distinguished by the structural role it plays in the collaborative process of cinema art. As digital technology transforms the way films are staged, replacing the real with the virtual, Ferrettis work comes at what may be the end of a 100-year-long tradition of full-scale, studio-built environments for films. This exhibition also serves to document this transitioning of cinema practice through its selection and organization of drawings, large-scale installations, and digital projection. Sketches, drawings, and design objects are installed throughout the three floors to further illuminate the artistic practice of one of the masters of the craft.
Dante Ferretti: Designing for the Big Screen, the accompanying 22-film retrospective, explores Ferrettis role in conceiving, for each project, a single set piece intended to stimulate the directors imagination and crystallize the visual style and character of the film. Indulging his preference for both dreamlike and historical subjects, and drawing on his knowledge of painting, sculpture, and poetry, Ferretti categorizes his designs as ―period‖ (Pier Paolo Pasolinis Salò, 1975), ―fantasy‖ (Terry Gilliams The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, 1988), or ―contemporary‖ (Elio Petris Todo Modo, 1976). Inspired by the grand-scale, operatic traditions of classical Italian cinema, Ferrettis work is most effectively viewed as it was originally intended: on the big screen. Other films to be screened include Neil Jordans Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles (1994), Anthony Minghellas Cold Mountain (2003), and Martin Scorseses Hugo (2011), Shutter Island (2010), and The Aviator (2004).