NEW YORK, NY.- Leila Heller Gallery is presenting Plastic Resonance, the first U.S. solo exhibition of Italian artist Francesca Pasquali, on view from September 8 October 22, 2016. Through the saturated hues of site specific installation, wall reliefs, and undulating, folded sculpture, Pasqualis work redesigns the contours of organic forms through ready-made inorganic material, rendering elegant, playful designs.
In Pasqualis work, inert plastic and industrial materialstraws, neoprene, polyurethane foam, bristles, balloonstake on an appearance flush with life. Often colorful and always laboriously arranged, cut drinking straws adopt the appearance of coral structures or microscopic topographies; vibrantly-hued plastic bursts for Spiderballs, once intended to serve as cobweb dusters, clustered on wall mounted reliefs, recall prolific sea urchins far more than prosaic domestic equipment. Indeed, stripped of their use value, Pasqualis materials evoke the influence of Arte Povera in their quotidian banality turned into objects of uncanny movement and beauty.
For Pasquali, material is also metaphor. Plastic means adaptable, prone to its environment, subject to being molded, to impressions, touch, or change. Likewise, works such as the polyurethane foam cocoons of the Bozzoli series, respond to the presence of the spectator. The Frappa series, inspired by the layered Italian pastry of the same name, invites the caress of the viewer. Their delicately patterned layers of black, white, or grey neoprene take on the appearance of fleshanimal, insect, or otherwise.
In this inaugural U.S. exhibition of Pasqualis oeuvre, the evolutionary and mutative state of microcosmic textures of plants and animals is mirrored in the weaving of reused industrial plastic materials that form the core of her sculptural works.
Francesca Pasquali received her degree at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bologna, Italy. In 2013, alongside other artists and the curator Ilaria Bignotti, she founded the artistic movement Resilienza italiana (Italian Resilience) with the goal of further developing the international dialogue surrounding sculpture by contemporary and emerging artists. A finalist of the Cairo Prize 2015 and Second Prize at the Henraux Foundation Prize in 2014, Pasqualis work has been analyzed by international art critics and curators such as Matt Williams, curator of ICA-London, and Michael Petry, director of MOCA, London. Pasquali has also been invited to participate in several major international art fairs, and her works are housed in important private and public institutions such as the Museo Diocesano, Brescia, the MAR Museo dArte della Città, Ravenna, the Ghisla Art Collection, Locarno; and the Thetis Foundation, Venice.
In 2015 was founded the Francesca Pasquali Archive, under the scientific direction of Ilaria Bignotti, with the goals of cataloging, archiving and authenticating her works, organizing it according to scientific and definitive parameters, of promoting her works in collaboration with public and private institutions, of improving the message of her artistic research with innovative communication systems and sophisticated technological resources.