Exhibition of seminal works by Mario Schifano opens at Luxembourg & Dayan in London

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, July 5, 2024


Exhibition of seminal works by Mario Schifano opens at Luxembourg & Dayan in London
Propaganda. Enamel and graphite on canvas and Perspex, 80 x 100 cm. Executed in 1965. Photo: Courtesy of Luxembourg & Dayan, London.



LONDON.- Luxembourg & Dayan announces an exhibition of seminal works by Mario Schifano (1934–98), one of Italy’s most significant post-war artists. Schifano was a truly radical figure who considered painting to be the frontier of the avant-garde, an intrinsically human art form capable of capturing the lifeblood of con- temporary culture. His prodigious talent was at its height in the ‘60s, a decade in which he experimented extensively with media and techniques, traversing a wide spectrum of styles that he made entirely his own. By focusing upon the years when his artistic output was at its most intense, the exhibition ‘Mario Schifano 1960 – 67’ demonstrates the artist’s extraordinary range of techniques and materials during this era. The works featured in the exhibition have important early provenance - some passing through the hands of legendary dealers like Giorgio Marconi and Ileana Sonnabend - others previously in inspired collections like Franchetti in Rome.

1960 was a watershed year for Schifano, marking the appear- ance of unconventional materials into his work and catapulting him into critical attention in both his home city Rome, where he held his first solo exhibition in 1961 at La Tartaruga (the venue also for debuts by Cy Twombly and Janis Kounellis), and New York where a few months later he showed at Sidney Janis Gallery for ‘The New Realists’ exhibition along- side Andy Warhol, Roy Lichten- stein and Tom Wesselmann. Cre- ating ‘Monochrome’ paintings at the start of the decade, Schifano eschewed notions of purity, in- stead embracing non-traditional pigments and supports such as enamel and parcel-paper and the drips, dirt and unevenness of gestural painting. By 1962, his canvases were appropriating iconic advertising logos and text; further urban signs and details of motorway land- scapes followed exploring ‘photodynamism’; and in 1963 Schifano was making ‘Incidente’ paintings, images of car accidents which parallel the ‘Car Crash’ works Warhol was making at the same moment, whilst differ- ing dramatically in their focus more on mechanisation and automation than on death. His ‘Paesaggio anemi- co (Anaemic Landscape)’ works of the mid-’60s incorporated transparent and chequered sheets of perspex and plexiglas bolted onto the canvas, presenting mechanical landscapes whose dynamic lines referred to works by Picabia and Brancusi. A year later in 1966 he began experimenting with spray-paint, a medium that he exploited to the full in his ‘Tutte Stelle’ paintings of 1967, scintillating depictions of stars and palm trees often seen through a prism of plastic.

The speed and quantity of Schifano’s investigations with materials are matched by the numerous and di- verse influences he brought to bear on his works: from the inclusion of contemporary culture that affiliate him with American post-war frontier artists like Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and Jim Dine, to colour planes and arabesques that recall Matisse, and to an Italian legacy that equally drew from Renaissance and the Fu- turist artists.1 He considered the past to be ‘a find, not to throw away but to recuperate,’yet the immediacy of his images and treatment of sources had a conceptual component that was entirely contemporary. Uni- fying this voracious experimentation and influence is a signature elegance of line, colour and composition — the isolation of detail and provocative shifts of focus that reveal a constantly creative approach to the act of looking. ‘I have tried to work with images that everyone sees or has seen, developing and making their essence, their germinal and primary possibilities emerge,’ Schifano explained, ‘looking is the first action, then there is lingering.’2

‘Mario Schifano 1960 – 67’ is organised in collaboration with Giorgio Marconi, Schifano’s dealer during the 1960’s. The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue featuring a new text by Claire Gilman (Ph.D. Columbia University), who is currently Curator at The Drawing Center, New York. She has taught art history and critical theory at many institutions including Columbia University, The Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, The Corcoran College for Art and Design, and MoMA. She has also written extensively for publications in- cluding Art Journal, CAA Reviews, Documents, Frieze, and October.

Mario Schifano was born in 1934 in Khoms (Libya) and moved to Rome with his family in the immediate Post War years. Although he received no formal art training, by the early 1960s he had risen to prominence and went on to become one of the most irreverent and kaleidoscopic Postmodern Italian painters. Using a wide variety of media ranging from painting to collage, photography and video; Schifano was very much an artist of his time, embodying the Pop aesthetic which artists such as Andy Warhol, Tom Wesselmann and Roy Lichtenstein were spearheading in the USA. Following decades of struggle with depression and substance abuse, the artist died in Rome in 1998, leaving behind an eclectic and compelling body of work, which has been a constant source of inspiration to contemporary artists and theorists alike.

His work has been exhibited widely both in Italy (Rome, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Arte e Critica, 1980; Venice, 40th and 41st Biennale, 1982 and 1984; Ferrara, Padiglione d’Arte Contemporanea, 1989; Milan, Palazzo della Triennale, 1995; Verona, Palazzo Forti, 1997) and internationally (Paris, Centre Pompidou, Identité italienne, 1981; San Francisco, Italo-American Museum, 1985; Oporto, Museo di Arte Contempo- ranea, 1986; Frankfurt, Kunstverein, 1987; London, Royal Academy, 1989; Brussels, Palais des Beaux Arts, 1989; New York, Solomon Guggenheim, 1994; Beijing, International Exhibition Center, 1997) and is included in a number of major international museum and private collections.



1 Mario Schifano, quoted in ‘Schifano. Tutte Stelle’, exh cat., MdM Museum, Porto cervo, May - October 2009, p. 57

2 Mario Schifano, quoted in ibid., p. 238










Today's News

June 27, 2014

'Paparazzi ! Photographers, Stars and Artists' opens at the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt

Rediscovered painting by Artemisia Gentileschi achieves $1.2 million at Sotheby's Paris

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, transfers eight illicitly trafficked antiquities to Nigeria

The Barnes Foundation presents 'The World is an Apple: The Still Lifes of Paul Cézanne'

Germany seeks to keep effective ban on Adolf Hitler's manifesto 'Mein Kampf' reprints

Marianne Boesky Gallery and Marlborough open joint project: Another Look at Detroit

Rare 'Macdonald' viola created by Antonio Stradivari fails to sell at Sotheby's auction

Mapping It Out: An Alternative Atlas of Contemporary Cartographies edited by Hans Ulrich Obrist

Old meets new in 16 stunning hybrid images of London's bridges from Museum of London Docklands

'Ming: The Golden Empire' opens at National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh

The Fifth Season: Group exhibition opens at James Cohan Gallery in New York

Rare guitar that survived wrath of The Who's Pete Townshend is top lot in Bonhams Entertainment Sale

Masterpiece London's 5th edition opens with a $20 million sale by British jewellers Symbolic and Chase

Photographic Object, 1970: An ambitious historical exhibition opens at Hauser & Wirth

Texas collection of Comedias Sueltas and Spanish Theater available for research and in online database

Paintings and works on paper from the 1960's-1980's by Anne Truitt on view at Charlotte Jackson Fine Art

Silent Exchange: The landscape photography of Charlie Waite on view at the National Theatre

Exhibition of seminal works by Mario Schifano opens at Luxembourg & Dayan in London

'Sun Ra: When Sun Comes Out: Ephemera 1956-1975' opens at David Nolan Gallery

Pinker's paean to Kouebokkeveld artists set to soar at Strauss & Co's June auction

Exhibition at Secession brings together works of art and ‘everyday’ objects

Ideas in Things: Group exhibition opens at Maria Stenfors in London




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful