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Contemporary Art in a Historical Town: a New Biennale Aims at Bridging Tradition & Reimagining The Future

October 19, 2023


In Fabriano, Beauty Councillor Maura Nataloni sets the stage for Intrecci (Entanglements), the inaugural edition of Fabriano Contemporanea, the town’s new international contemporary art show. “This is an exhibition that will surprise everyone, promote change and contribute to the rebirth of the city,” Nataloni declares at the press conference, immediately sparking a discussion on whether contemporary art suits a town with a century-old cultural legacy. 

Located in the Marche region, the 31,000-strong town of Fabriano has a rich historical and artistic heritage. Its medieval center hosts an extraordinary collection of civic and religious buildings that stand out even more against the backdrop of the Apennine mountains. Historically known for paper manufacturing and later machinery production, the town has faced industrial decline in recent decades and is now pivoting towards the creative industry for economic revival, being part of the UNESCO Creative City Network since 2013. 

Under the direction of Chiara Zampetti Egidi, a Berlin-based art curator and author, Entanglements features works by international and Italian contemporary artists across two museum exhibitions and six solo projects, including various street installations that involve local communities collaborating with artists in the production process. “Art is both an experience and a way of having fun,” says Ms Zampetti Egidi, emphasizing the event’s excitement for both local residents and participating artists. According to Zampetti, Fabriano provides artists with unique spaces that inspire different ideas.

Entanglements, the title of this first edition, derives from the connection between residents and artists, as well as between the historical and the contemporary. Zampetti dismisses notions of a contemporary-classical divide in Fabriano, asserting that "contemporary arises from tradition."


Left, Luca Buvoli's installation at the 15th-century Loggiato San Francesco. Right, resident participating in site installations |  Photos Giorgio Benni

The exhibitions showcase remarkable contemporary art not commonly found off the beaten art track, outside of major art world capitals. The site-specific projects are a refreshing and fun part of the Biennale. London-based artist Be Andr’s Ora (Now) uses shop windows to display words from Fabriano residents on their personal perceptions of the city. The project repurposes 15 vacant shops providing an alternative use for a prime location resource. Interestingly, it has also prompted some owners to transform them into spontaneous art galleries and wine shops overnight. Judging by the speed in which the project has managed to trigger new actions, Now by Andr (b. 1978, Oslo) might be considered one of the fastest urban regeneration precursors in recent history. 

 

Be Andr, Now (Chiuso e Aperto), (2023) at Piazza del Comune | Photo Be Andr

Creatively Together, an installation by Fabriano residents with the Inside Out Project by French artist JR (b. 1983, Paris), celebrates the transformative power of creativity in building connections through 86 portraits displayed in a historical theater's cloister. The process of organizing the action, creating photos, and displaying the posters in the cloister, involves the participants coming together, strengthening their relationships. The project has brought many visitors to the cloister excited to spot familiar faces among the portraits.

 

JR Inside Out Project action, Creatively Together, (2023) at Teatro Gentile  | Photo Giorgio Benni for Fabriano Contemporanea

Luca Buvoli, a NYC-based multimedia artist (b. 1963, Italy), presents Flags & Flipbook (Astrodoubt Floating in Gravitational Waves), a site-specific installation within the Loggiato San Francesco, dating back to 1450. The installation, exploring the nuances of motion and time, hangs a series of flags from the arcade’s tie bars, depicting the sequential movement of an astronaut floating in space. The flipbook shows the stroboscopic sequence. However, the arcade provides a more fun way to experience the sequence by running beneath the flags, a suggestion from Buvoli himself who shared how thrilled he is to portray time theory in a Renaissance setting. 

 

Luca Buvoli, Flags (Astrodoubt Floating in Gravitational Waves), (2020-23) at Loggiato San Francesco | Photo Luca Buvoli

Buvoli explores his fascination with time through the Space Doubt Expedition Project, initiated in 2009 with NASA scientists. The project features Astrodoubt, a fictitious astronaut, and the 2022 video A Brief History of Time (Under Covid) –in 7 Lessons, showcased at Entanglements. This animated compilation, conceived and executed entirely by Buvoli, navigates complex scientific, philosophical, and religious ideas around the notion of time in a comic-like way. Combining colourful handmade drawings and graphics, the 13-minute video spans several years of research and creation. This effort does not get lost on the viewer. It provides a highly enjoyable and moving experience, as Mr Buvoli skillfully conveys the basics of science through visual stories.

 

Luca Buvoli, A Brief History of Time (Under Covid) – in 7 Lessons, (2022) at Palazzo del Podesta | Video screenshot

The show ambitiously includes Fabriano's historic buildings, such as the recently restored Montini Cinema, to show The Neon Hieroglyph, a hypnotic 20-minute video by Turner-Prize awardee Tai Shani (b. 1976 London). 

 

Tai Shani, The Neon Hieroglyph, (2021) at Montini Cinema | Photo Giorgio Benni for Fabriano Contemporanea

The iconic Palazzo del Podestà, a medieval building initially serving as the ruler’s office, hosts the exhibition Through the Unfolding Glass curated by Anne-Sophie Dinant. This exhibition explores various realities through the use of the camera and showcases works from artists such as Susanne Bürner (b. 1970, Ellwangen/Jagst), Mimosa Echard (b. 1986, Alès), Haris Epaminonda, Jochen Lempert, Jonas Mekas, Jean Painlevé, James Richards, Alice Theobald, and Wolfgang Tillmans (b. 1968, Remscheid).

 

Left Mimosa Echard, Narcisse 4 (2021) | Right Susanne Bürner, Charlotte Series (2023)

Wolfgang Tillmans, Congo Night (a) (2018)

Wolfgang Tillmans, Sao Paulo (2012)

The Biennale also features the exhibition Take It Easy, Baby. The Collector’s Lifestyle, curated by Matteo Boetti. Adding artworks from his own collection to the outstanding Guelfo collection, Boetti, son of Italian conceptual artist Alighiero e Boetti, shares first hand stories from the Italian 20th-century art scene. Through his perspective, the exhibition offers insights into the network of relationships that unfold when art becomes an integral part of one's life.

 

Felice Levini, Untitled (2018-2021) at Museo Guelfo

It is precisely this “network of relationships” brought forward by Boetti that this Biennale aspires to strengthen in Fabriano. By tapping into art to breathe new life into the historic setting, blending tradition and innovation, and encouraging residents to engage with their town in new and inspiring ways, the town not only transforms but also lays the foundation for a renewed sense of community. Entanglements answers the lingering question: classical or contemporary –art transcends time, becoming a bridge to a vibrant, reimagined future.

For visitors, Fabriano Contemporanea provides an enjoyable art experience, certainly due to the quality of the art and the beauty of the setting, but also because there doesn't seem to be mass tourism in Fabriano and art can be enjoyed quietly. A luxury long gone elsewhere. 

 

About 
Fabriano Contemporanea, #1 Intrecci (Entanglements) | 8 September 2023 - 3 February 2024 | Fabriano (Marche), Italy

Featured Artists
 
Photos
by PS unless stated otherwise. Cover picture Now (Io Tu, Io Noi, Qui), 2023 by Be Andr. Photo credit Giorgio Benni, courtesy of Fabriano Contemporanea.

 

UVNT Madrid Fair Showcases Emerging Artists Through Extraordinary Setting and Private Collection Acquisition Prizes

March 10, 2023

UVNT, the Madrid fair for new contemporary art, is back for its 7th edition during Madrid Art Week, with 34 galleries represented, half of them international galleries, focusing on painting as a medium to showcase emerging and mid-career artists from around the world.

The fair has evolved from its origins as a space for contemporary urban art to include more gallery-friendly formats but it remains informed by contemporary culture. This is evidenced by the selection of artists, many with urban and street art backgrounds.  

UVNT stands out from other Art Week events for many reasons but mainly for its extraordinary setting. Housed in the lower levels of the Architects Registration Board (COAM) building, a stunning development around a landscaped courtyard­­, the event offers views to the courtyard and easy navigation thanks to the gallery connection of its two levels. 

Some of the fair highlights were by Ela Fidalgo (Palma de Mallorca, 1993), Fausto Amundarain (Caracas, 1992) and Sergio Gomez/SRGER (Sevilla, 1983) –see pictures below. 

Fidalgo, a trained fashion designer who uses embroidery and fabrics in her artworks, presented a bright and powerful series titled Why Should Anybody be Afraid of Red, Yellow, and Blue? with which she seeks to reconnect with the freshness that unfinished processes provide. Fidalgo is a prolific artist with an impressive artwork production.

Fausto Amundarian showcased a beautiful acrylic on canvas series that, in a sleek way, explores identity and childhood memories with children's icons and images related to comics, while Sergio Gomez –a graffiti artist whose practice now encompasses painting, photography, art installations, video-art, and mural painting– presented a solo show on the ups and downs of the creative process.

To support contemporary creation and give greater visibility to artists, UVNT hosts private collections, institutions, and foundations, who offer acquisition prizes by selecting an artwork that will become part of their art collections. The Bassat Collection from Catalonia has awarded their acquisition prize to Future, a sculptural-painting by Quintin Rivera Toro (Puerto Rico, 1978) that represents the collapse of ideas and their meaning –cover picture.


Ela Fidalgo, Why Should Anybody be Afraid of Red, Yellow, and Blue? VI, (2023) | La Bibi Gallery, Mallorca


Fausto Amundarain, Folding Gleam, (2023) | Galerie Heike Strelow Frankfurt

Sergio Gómez/SRGE, Una palabra, 2023 | Swinton Gallery Madrid
Ela Fidalgo, Why Should Anybody be Afraid of Red, Yellow, and Blue? V, (2023) | La Bibi Gallery, Mallorca


About 
UVNT Art Fair | 23-26 February 2023 | COAM, Hortaleza 63, Madrid

Featured Artists
 
Photos
by PS and featured galleries. Cover picture Future (2023) by Quintín Rivera Toro at Zawahra Alejandro Gallery, San Juan, Puerto Rico

#NewContemporaryArt #MadridArtWeek


ARCOMadrid 2023

March 09, 2023

ARCO, Madrid's premier contemporary art fair, has recently wrapped up its 42nd edition with an impressive turnout of 93,000 visitors, 211 galleries from 36 countries represented and an exciting new section dedicated to the Mediterranean art scene. This article will take a closer look at some of the standout works and artists from ARCO 2023.

The Mediterranean: A Round Sea program has been an exceptional initiative with artworks from 19 galleries from the region. Curated by Marina Fokidis, the program has sought to explore a collective identity and to facilitate dialogue between different points of the Mediterranean. The space, designed by architect du jour Andres Jaque, has wonderfully served the purpose with an agora-like central seating area, where visitors could gather and relax. Interestingly, this space was one of the few available to visitors at the fair, as the main seating area was by invitation only.

Highlights at the Mediterranean section included some powerful artworks by the multi-talented Semiha Berksoy (Istanbul, 1910-2004) and Sanja Iveković (Zagreb, 1949). Berksoy –an opera singer, actress, performance artist, poet, and painter– was a creative force whose approach to art was inseparable from her life, while Iveković's artistic practice includes photography, sculpture, performance, and installation, with a strong focus on gender, identity, and political issues. In her featured artwork The Right One (The Pearls of the Revolution), Iveković reflects on the gendered power structures that exist within political movements. 

Semiha Berksoy, My Mother Playing the Oud, 1958 (left)Family, Zeliha Berksoy, Yıldırım Aktuna, Oğul Aktun, 1972 (right) | Galerist Istanbul

Sanja Iveković, The Right One (The Pearls of the Revolution), 2007-2011 | 1 Mira Madrid

Another highlight at the Mediterranean section was Treasures by Berlin-based Silvina Der Meguerditchian (Buenos Aires, 1967), a beautiful mixed media installation, partly presented on the wall and partly inside a vintage table-vitrine. The artwork consisted of a notebook with a collection of Armenian folk health remedies that the artist inherited from her great-grandmother, and of objects that are building on the book like plants and seeds. The installation raises questions about issues of displacement, personal and collective memory, and healing processes. Der Merguerditchian is also the artistic director of the Houshamadyan project, an open digital archive reconstructing Ottoman Armenian village life.

Silvina Der Merguerditchian, detail from the series Treasures, 2015 | Kalfayan Gallery Athens

BEST OF   
Two artworks in particular have left me pondering after my visit to ARCO 2023: Happy Places (2006-2014) by Sven Johne (Rügen, 1976) and Blowback / The Power by Teresa Margolles (Culiacán, Sinaloa, 1963).

Happy Places (2006-2014) is a sleek artwork that explores the topic of happiness through a collection of photographs and a supporting text. The artwork features a series of photos showcasing various islands for sale in Vanuatu, a South Pacific Island state. The text tells the story of how the artist, inspired by Vanuatu's top ranking at the Happy Planet Index, placed an ad in a local newspaper to learn more about the happiness of the people in Vanuatu. He eventually got the following response: “Hi Sven, you know what? 80 percent of our population can manage without money. Most people do not have money all year round. They still live their lives as successfully as anyone else. Money is not everything in life. Land is our life. Land is mother to us. Land provides us with life. Happy to help, Willie.” Years later, the artist found out that ten of the 83 islands in Vanuatu were up for sale.

Sven Johne, Happy Places (2006-2014), 2014 | Klemm's Berlin
 

Johne is a remarkable storyteller who captured my attention with his previous work, Heroes of Labour, four years ago. Klemm's gallery displayed other works by Johne including the 15-minute video On Vanishing, a captivating narration of an eleven-year-old about the island of Rügen and her ancestors there.

Blowback/The Power by Teresa Margolles is a reflection on societies where human life is deemed dispensable and the display of ill-gotten wealth is celebrated. The artwork features a glamorous evening dress reminiscent of those worn by young beauty pageant contestants in Mexico. While such dress is associated with power, Margolles warns that in reality it endangers beauty queens to fall prey to the drug cartel. The bejewelled right sleeve is a powerful symbol of this concern, as each gem is, in fact, a piece of broken glass collected by Margolles after a cartel-related shooting.

Teresa Margolles, Blowback / The Power, 2022 | Galerie Peter Kilchmann Zurich

Other artworks exploring pressing issues facing our society today included those by Alicia Framis (Barcelona, 1967) and Šejla Kamerić (Sarajevo, 1976). Framis reflects on invisible glass ceilings and veneration with Once Upon a Time There was a Woman (MALI), while Kamerić denounces prejudices and war crimes against women with her piece Bosnian Girl.

Alicia Framis, Once Upon a Time There was a Woman (Mali), 2023, Galeria Juana de Aizpuru Madrid | Šejla Kamerić, Bosnian Girl, 2007, Eugster Belgrade

PHOTOGRAPHY

The fair has seen powerful stories conveyed through photography –see blow. Ayrson Heráclito's (Macaúbas, Bahia, 1968) wonderful shots reflecting on Afro-Bahian cultural issues have possibly contributed to earn HOA Gallery the best booth award in the Opening section dedicated to young galleries. Teresa Margolles has further documented violence with 21 photographs of small altars that honor victims of violence who have died along a 40-km stretch of road controlled by various criminal groups. Jorge Fuembuena (Zaragoza, 1979) equally documents violence with a recreation of Goya's notorious painting The Third of May 1808, while Dario Villalba (San Sebastian, 1939 - Madrid, 2018) explores homelessness. On a more cheerful note, Monica de Miranda (Porto, 1976) reflects on exploration and new possibilities with Astronaut, and Elger Esser (Stuttgart, 1967) on stillness and tranquillity with the capture of a seascape in soft light.

Ayrson Heráclito, Vodun Agbê I, 2010 | Hoa São Paulo

Teresa Margolles, 40 kilometers, 2014  | Galerie Peter Kilchmann Zurich

Jorge Fuembuena, El 3 de mayo en Madrid, 2021 | Max Estrella Madrid

Monica de Miranda, Astronaut, Path to the Stars, 2022 | Carlos Carvalho Arte Contemporanea Lisbon
Dario Villalba, Homeless | El Mundo
Elger Esser, Beauduc IV, France, 2009 | Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle Munich
 
SHAPES / OBJECTS
ARCO 2023 has seen beautiful sculptures by Antony Gormley (London, 1950) and David Nash (Esher, Surrey, 1945) in cast iron and redwood respectively; a new hanging object by ARCO's regular Tomas Saraceno (San Miguel de Tucuman, 1973); and remarkable relief works by Olafur Eliasson (Copenhagen, 1967), Timo Nasseri (Berlin, 1972) and Pae White (Pasadena, 1963) who has exhibited further works as part of a solo artist project. A popular relief was The Kiss by duo Momu & No Es (Basel, 1982 & Barcelona, 1979), as evidenced by the large crowds gathered in front of the blown-up manga characters hairstyles.

Pae White, Middle Fauna A, 2021 | Neugerriemschneider Berlin

Timo Nasseri, Radiance #1, 2022, Sabrina Amrani Madrid | Sarah Morris, August, 2022, Galeria La Caja Negra Madrid

Antony Gormley, (left to right) Press (Block), 2020; Grasp (Block), 2019; Grasp II (Block), 2019 | Continua San Gimignano

David Nash, Figure Column, 2022 | Lelong Paris

Olafur Eliasson, Dew Solidarity, 2021 & Tomas Saraceno, GI 514 b/M+I, 2022 | Neugerriemschneider Berlin
Momu & No Es., Vesta & Pallas, The Kiss, 2022 | Joey Ramone Rotterdam
 
OIL ON CANVAS 
Lastly, a selection of paintings that have somehow moved me, either by the quality of the sketches, such as Robert Muntean's (Leoben, 1982) and Maki Na Kamura's (Osaka); by the choice of color by Andreas Breunig (Eberbach, 1983) –see cover, Matt Mullican (Santa Monica, 1951) and Marcus Oehlen (Krefeld, 1956); and by the unusual display of Ad Minoliti's work (Buenos Aires, 1980) that included a mural painted around the artworks.

Markus Oehlen, Untitled, 2021, Galeria Juana de Aizpuru Madrid | Robert Muntean, LJJW, 2020, Galerie Crone Viena


Maki Na Kamura, (unknown title), 2023 | Contemporary Fine Arts Berlin

 
Matt Mullican, Signs in the Elements of that Body (smell), 2018 | Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art Lisbon

Ad Minoliti, Tuiti, 2022; Space Cat Cafe Series, 2022; Galactic Gatoteca (mural), 2022 | Peres Projects Berlin


About
ARCO International Contemporary Art Fair | Madrid, 22-26 February 2023
| IFEMA Madrid Halls 7 & 9 

Previous Articles
 
Featured Artists
Sarah Morris 
Šejla Kamerić
Silvina Der Meguerditchian 
Sven Johne

Photos
by PS, ARCO and featured galleries. Cover picture Untitled (2023) by Andreas Breunig at Galerie Bärbel Grässlin Frankfurt

 
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