Adeline Lunati

Adeline Lunati, Preziosi stampi

Adeline Lunati, Preziosi stampi

Morgan Maggiolini

Morgan Maggiolini, Radical

Morgan Maggiolini, Radical. “Undisciplined”, Civic Art Gallery, Savona, 2006

Goshka Macuga

Pinot Gallizio. Ceramic designs (never completed by the artist), 1957; Courtesy Archivio Gallizio, Turin

On the left: Antonio Siri, Piero Simondo, Luigi Caldenzano and Pinot Gallizio in the Siri laboratory, Albisola, 1965. On the right: Tiziana Casapietra, Alberto Viola, Roberto Costantino, Goshka Macuga and Ernesto Canepa in the Ernan laboratory, Albisola, 2006

Goshka Macuga, ... come ogni altro. Il vuoto è forma. Da Esperimento di pittura notte di Pinot Gallizio  1

Goshka Macuga, ... come ogni altro. Il vuoto è forma. Da Esperimento di pittura notte di Pinot Gallizio  2

Goshka Macuga, ... come ogni altro. Il vuoto è forma. Da Esperimento di pittura notte di Pinot Gallizio  3

Goshka Macuga, ... come ogni altro. Il vuoto è forma. Da Esperimento di pittura notte di Pinot Gallizio  4

I utilise the traditional curatorial display mechanisms that allocate the provision of “total” environments (Gesamkunstwerk) to exhibit other people’s work. In this environment, artworks are individuated from my own work as a facilitator of theirs, yet “my work” is structured by visual agreement, with each participation, into a complicit reading of the whole, as a collective endeavour. Each artwork is poised within the superimposing frames of authorship to suggest the overarching framework of the institution. This imitation of the museum methodology is not an ironic strategy in the direct sense of opposing its authority. It is an indirect and poetic device that loosens categories and pauses, seeking or fixing meaning. These relationships address issues of authorship and confront the individual and his/her singularity and experience.
The total environment, the work, which I assemble, is articulated by specific parameters in the exhibition space, such as the architecture of the display. Consequently, “the historical” loses its primary dimension, and becomes a-historical, non-historical, etcetera. The presence/absence of history is therefore inseparable from the participation of the viewer, which shows the indivisibility of the artist/curator mediation within the institution as a temporary construct.
During my research on the history of artists associated with Albisola, my interest focused primarily on Pinot Gallizio. His projects, such as Caverna dell’antimateria (Anti-matter Cave) and Tempio dei Miscredenti brought to my attention the existing parallels between my work methodology and Gallizio’s.
In 1999, I constructed an environment entitled Cave in Sali Gia Gallery, London. Both Gallizio and I attempted to create a “total” environment where the collective endeavour would take place.
In 1999, I was not aware of Gallizio’s existence, thus it was fascinating to find material at the Gallizio’s Archive in Turin. It created a new, historical frame for my work and a rich area of research. My experiments with making ceramics in Albisola negotiated Gallizio’s first experiments with art making and his collaborations with Simondo. At Siri Studio in 1954 they produced ceramic masks and vases which resembled Roman artefacts. The work has been lost and only exists as a series of photographic images and drawings, which has given me an indication of the aesthetics of the work, but not the process involved in the production of these ceramics.

Goshka Macuga

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel, Dr. Keramik. Casa Asger Jorn, Albissola Marina

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel, Dr. Keramik. Casa Asger Jorn, Albissola Marina

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel, Dr. Keramik. Casa Asger Jorn, Albissola Marina

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel, Dr. Keramik. Casa Asger Jorn, Albissola Marina

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel, Dr. Keramik. Casa Asger Jorn, Albissola Marina

Each story is affected by an unspecified number of anti-stories, all interconnected with each other.

Jonathan Meese & Charlet Kugel

Alessandro Mendini

Alessandro Mendini, Tre sfere  1

Alessandro Mendini, Tre sfere  2

This vase consists of various spheres, with varying diameters, penetrating into each other to generate a complex figure. Visually, the work refers to soap bubbles, when they remain attached to each other for a brief moment. But here, what is evident, is the weight, the ceramic material.

Alessandro Mendini

Multiplicity

Multiplicity, Scanner

Scanner

Wagons that normally transport coal from the sea into the hills leave the port of Savona every day. The area was mapped by attaching a camera to one of the wagons, thus creating a 35 km cross-section of the cableway layout. The end result is presented as a video shot from the bottom to the top, turning the filming viewpoint upside-down. In this way, the scanner-ableway provides the spectator with the opportunity to view a completely unexplored countryside.

Plant length: 17,431m
Speed: 3.5m/sec
Exact travel time: 1h 28 min
Number of wagons moving through the system: 1,240
Capacity: 1,000Kg
Total amount of material handled monthly:
about 50,000 tons (presently)
Maximum and minimum height above ground: max. approx. 100 m-min. ground level
Year built and other historical milestones: 1912 Line 1-1937 Line 2-1926 Quay
Number of employees: 194
Power consumption: approx. 3.7 Kwh/t (including unloading) excluding services (lighting, etc.).

Multiplicity (Matteo Ghidoni, Alessandro Petti)

Pere Noguera

Pere Noguera, Transit

Pere Noguera, Transit

Pere Noguera, Transit

Pere Noguera, Transit

Putting a car out of commission. Fossilizing last century’s main symbol of speed and modernity. A domestic object glorified for its instrumental nature and modern-ay canons of artificial beauty, the vehicle is stripped of its basic features to become a showcase, forced to withdraw into itself and to act as a dusty landscape in which clay dust completely covers the interior and the objects left inside by people.
Transformed into a showcase, it only provides a glimpse of what was there before, where the backs of the old seats are transformed into small hills protruding above a desert-like horizon. A landscape of dust that covers the steering wheel and the seats, transforming a functional object, the car, into a museum display case, shifting the existence of the outdoor landscape toward an interiorised experience. To subvert reality, to transmute an everyday condition into a work of art, this is the purpose.

Pere Noguera

Giovanni Occhipinti

Giovanni Occhipinti, Un vaso per un'unica rosa

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