Azimut/h. Continuity and the new
From 20 Settembre 2014 to 19 Gennaio 2015
Venice
Place: Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Address: Dorsoduro 701
Times: every day 10 am - 6 pm
Responsibles: Luca Massimo Barbero
Ticket price: full € 14, reduced € 12, students € 8, free up to 10 years
Telefono per informazioni: +39 041 2405411
E-Mail info: info@guggenheim-venice.it
Official site: http://www.guggenheim-venice.it
The exhibition AZIMUT/H. Continuity and the New is a tribute to the post World War II neo-avantgarde in Italy, currently of widespread interest to critics, curators and the general public, and in particular to Azimuth, the gallery and the review founded in 1959 in Milan by Piero Manzoni(1933–1963) and Enrico Castellani (b. 1930). The exhibition reveals Azimuth’s central position in the panorama of Italian and international art of those years: like a creative earthquake it was one of the great catalysts of Italian and European visual and conceptual culture of the time and an intellectual bridge between a new, revolutionary generation and the most contemporary developments in art.
Like a thunderbolt of intense activity, between September 1959 and July 1960, Azimuth is evermore acknowledged in the collective consciousness of critics and historians as a critical episode, marked by radical experimentation, energized by its ties to some of the major figures of the art scene in those years and by lively international dialogue. Different in the spelling of their titles, Azimut (the gallery) and Azimuth (the review) together formulated ‘a new concept of art’, that thrived on the dialectic of ‘continuity and the new’. On view works by Manzoni and Castellani of course, and also by artists-protagonists of this period as Lucio Fontana, Alberto Burri, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, Heinz Mack, Otto Piene and Günther Uecker.
With AZIMUT/H. Continuity and the New, Luca Massimo Barbero adds to a series of exhibitions he has curated researching the art scene in the postwar decades. The exhibition anticipates another celebration of the European neo-avantgardes of that time: ZERO: Countdown to Tomorrow, 1950s-60s, opening October 10, 2014, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, curated by Valerie Hillings, Curator and Manager, Curatorial Affairs Abu Dhabi Project.
The catalogue of AZIMUT/H. Continuity and the New, published by Marsilio Editori in Italian and English, will include in its 600 pages a series of scholarly studies, unpublished materials, periodical literature, as well as reproducing the research materials used for the exhibition, and a series of essays covering different aspects of Azimuth, by Luca Massimo Barbero, Flaminio Gualdoni, Antoon Melissen, Francesca Pola and Federico Sardella.
Like a thunderbolt of intense activity, between September 1959 and July 1960, Azimuth is evermore acknowledged in the collective consciousness of critics and historians as a critical episode, marked by radical experimentation, energized by its ties to some of the major figures of the art scene in those years and by lively international dialogue. Different in the spelling of their titles, Azimut (the gallery) and Azimuth (the review) together formulated ‘a new concept of art’, that thrived on the dialectic of ‘continuity and the new’. On view works by Manzoni and Castellani of course, and also by artists-protagonists of this period as Lucio Fontana, Alberto Burri, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, Heinz Mack, Otto Piene and Günther Uecker.
With AZIMUT/H. Continuity and the New, Luca Massimo Barbero adds to a series of exhibitions he has curated researching the art scene in the postwar decades. The exhibition anticipates another celebration of the European neo-avantgardes of that time: ZERO: Countdown to Tomorrow, 1950s-60s, opening October 10, 2014, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, curated by Valerie Hillings, Curator and Manager, Curatorial Affairs Abu Dhabi Project.
The catalogue of AZIMUT/H. Continuity and the New, published by Marsilio Editori in Italian and English, will include in its 600 pages a series of scholarly studies, unpublished materials, periodical literature, as well as reproducing the research materials used for the exhibition, and a series of essays covering different aspects of Azimuth, by Luca Massimo Barbero, Flaminio Gualdoni, Antoon Melissen, Francesca Pola and Federico Sardella.
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