Exhibition examines parallel artistic movements in the 1960s and 1970s in the U.S. and Italy

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Exhibition examines parallel artistic movements in the 1960s and 1970s in the U.S. and Italy
Installation view of Bochner Boetti Fontana at Magazzino Italian Art (October 2 - January 11, 2020). Photo by Alexa Hoyer. Courtesy of Magazzino Italian Art Foundation.



COLD SPRING, NY.- This fall, Magazzino Italian Art opened a special exhibition examining the formal, conceptual, and procedural affinities in the work of Mel Bochner, Alighiero Boetti, and Lucio Fontana. Curated by Bochner in collaboration with Magazzino, the exhibition marks the first presentation to consider the American artist’s extensive, yet overlooked, engagement with the practices of Fontana and Boetti, as well as with Italian art at large. Bochner Boetti Fontana offers, through the artist’s perspective, a number of resonances between his work and that of the Italian and Italian-Argentine artists: an exploration of systems, language, and materials; and a sense of irony and humor, often and especially shared by Arte Povera and Conceptualism, as all these works opened the work of art onto the space of display. The exhibition also traces parallels between the artistic movements that developed on both sides of the Atlantic during the 1960s and 1970s: Spatialism and Arte Povera in Italy, and Process and Conceptual art in the United States.

On view October 2, 2020 through January 11, 2021, Bochner Boetti Fontana features paintings, sculptures, and installations, including works from Bochner’s personal archive, as well as major international loans. The exhibition is presented with the support of the Archivio Alighiero Boetti and Fondazione Lucio Fontana, and is accompanied by a catalog, featuring contributions from Bochner and Magazzino’s 2019-20 Scholar-in-Residence Tenley Bick, who is also Assistant Professor of Global Contemporary Art at Florida State University.

Bochner and Bick will connect for a conversation to be presented digitally over Magazzino da Casa, the museum’s online platform for digital content.The two will discuss Bochner’s practice from the 1960s to the present, with a focus on his long-term interest in the work of postwar Italian art, transatlantic resonances in art of the 1960s, and the impact of his personal experiences in Italy throughout the decades. Details on how to access this conversation will be released later.

“We are incredibly honored to be working with Mel Bochner to curate this special exhibition that explores key tenets of his practice in tandem with those of Alighiero Boetti and Lucio Fontana,” said Magazzino Director Vittorio Calabrese. “The exhibition marks the first time that an American artist will be shown in our galleries and speaks to the central theme of our 2020 season, which reveals the international resonances of postwar and contemporary Italian art within a broader global perspective.”

One of the most celebrated figures in Conceptual art, Bochner was initially best received in Italy, where he has spent significant time across his career. He had an early solo exhibition at the Galleria Gian Enzo Sperone in Turin in 1970, an important gallery for Arte Povera, and was included in Germano Celant’s now canonical exhibition Conceptual Art, Arte Povera, Land Art of the same year.

Bochner Boetti Fontana highlights connections between the practices of the three artists, including the similar uses of systems, language, and materials by Bochner and Boetti, and the innovative approach to artwork and exhibition space by all three. Works by Bochner in the exhibition register the artist’s long-term, but understudied, engagement with Boetti and Fontana and with Italian art, history, and culture broadly, including:

• Meditation on the Theorem of Pythagoras (1972/1993), one of the artist’s floor-based sculptures from his Fontana’s Lights series, made with Murano glass fragments found in Fontana’s studio in Milan;




• Language Is Not Transparent (Italian / English) (1970/2019), a text-based work developed in English and Italian that reflects the importance of the written word for both Bochner and Boetti; and

• Yizkor (For the Jews of Rome) (1993), a somber work composed of a U.S. Army blanket and extinguished matchsticks that recalls the use of “impoverished” materials by Arte Povera artists.

Highlight works by artists Alighiero Boetti and Lucio Fontana on view include:

• Boetti’s Ghise (Boetti) (1968), one of the first works in which the artist directed his attention toward his own name and handwriting. On a piece of corrugated cardboard, he etched his signature and then subsequently created both positive and negative reproductions of it on sheets of cast iron.This work contains elements characteristic of Boetti’s work, including his focus on materialand the emergence of ideas around split personality, of doubling up, and of duality;

• Boetti’s Alternandosi e dividendosi (1989), which belongs to the artist’s Arazzi series of embroideries. Mosaic-like grids of individual letters combined into words and phrases that the viewer must decipher, these works reveal phrases that range from poetry to mathematical problems. Here, Boetti demonstrates how language can both conceal and reveal meaning, pointing to its artifice;

• Dama (1967-68), which is part of a small group of works in which Boetti enshrined his love of systems within a game of his own invention. Consisting of 100 “playing” pieces ordered in a jigsaw-like grid, the blocks in the work compose a set of dominoes thatfit together according to an internal logic of the artist’s own devise. The simple forms are belied by the complex rules that organize the piece;

• Fontana’s Concetto Spaziale, I Quanta (1960), which combines nine geometrically shaped canvases, uniformly covered in water-based red paint, and each with distinct cuts and punctures. Entitled “Quanta," a term Fontana borrowed from quantum physics, this work composes different elements in constellations of canvasses that will be arranged by Bochner for the exhibition;

• Fontana’s Concetto Spaziale (1956) from his Pietre series, where he applied reflective materials, such as fragments of Murano glass, to the surfaces of his perforated paintings and which he started from 1952-53. A very rare black velvet Pietre, this work features stones and methodical punctures on the surface that imply a spatial dimension with contrasting points of protrusion and concave areas that reveal infinite conceptions of space; and

• Fontana’s Io Sono un Santo (1958), a work on paper mounted on canvas in which the artist declares, “I am a saint,” in blue ink with an interjected “not” added in pencil and on the reverse reads “Io sono una carogna” (I am a lowlife). Chosen by Bochner for the inclusion of language, this work reveals the artist's ongoing questioning of the infinite and underlines Fontana’s sense of irony. This very uncommon work is among one of the first examples of the artist’s cuts.










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