ROME.- Autoritratto al lavoro (Self-portrait at work) is the first major anthological exhibition on Elisabetta Benassi (Rome, 1966) presented by an institution active in the city where she lives and works. The project presents over twenty years of her artistic output, juxtaposing works from the early 2000s with more recent pieces, and three new productions made for the show.
Moving freely across a wide range of languages, media and imageryan approach that has always been a distinctive earmark of her researchBenassi wryly observes the cultural, critical and artistic legacy of modernity, with the aim of entering history not to quote from it, but to bring it back to life in the present, creating a sort of intrusion, suggesting a constantly paradoxical idea of time.
Convinced of the potential offered by an exhibition, more than individual works, to convey an idea in a complex way, the artist has chosen to reflect on the very notion of a retrospective, formulating a large installation: a mise-en-scène of her works, built through a system of architectures and settings arranged in space like theatrical wings. Each of these modular structures has been conceived to host one workpartially concealing it from the gaze of visitorsand at the same time to respond to its specific narrative and poetic intentions, thus offering a new device for experiencing the works, which have often taken form in response to specific sites, situations, and time frames.
Each structure, covered with modular plaster panels bearing traces of the moulds used to create it, appears as a sculptural body with brutalist features, resulting in a display that becomes an artistic intervention in its own right.
Following the suggestion implied in the title, the exhibition presents itself as a possible self-portrait of the artist at work, aimed at generating a visual and linguistic score in which the pieces are presented by association, intentionally avoiding chronological order.
Thanks to the coherence of the display and the continuity provided by the plaster architecture, the artist enacts a system of formal harmony, offering a discursive framework for her research, which has always defied systems of classification, rejecting any ideas of style and canon.
Elisabetta Benassi (Rome, 1966) lives and works in Rome. With references to the cultural, political and artistic tradition of the 20th century, to psychoanalysis and controversial themes of the contemporary world, the oeuvre of Elisabetta Benassi critically scans the conflictual space of our present. The recurring characteristic of her artistic output is the use of installation, video, and photography as devices with which to create forceful emotional impressions along with a different moral focus inside the viewer. In the background of her works there is always a question about the condition and identity of the present, their relationship with the historical past and an urge to reconsider it, observing it against the light.
Her work has been shown in many Italian and international contexts and institutions, including the Venice Biennale. Solo exhibitions include: The Drowned World, Peter Freeman Inc., New York (2024); Empire, Museo Nazionale Romano - Crypta Balbi, Rome (2022); Lady and Gentlemen, Fondazione Adolfo Pini, Milan (2021); The Sovereign Individual, Galerie Jousse Entreprise, Paris (2018); It Starts with the Firing, Collezione Maramotti, Reggio Emilia (2017); Letargo, Magazzino, Rome (2017); Smog à Los Angeles, CRAC Alsace, Altkirch (2013); Voglio fare subito una mostra, Fondazione Merz, Turin (2013); Site Specific #2, MAN - Museo dArte Provincia di Nuoro, Nuoro (2007); Tutti morimmo a stento, MACRO Museo di Arte Contemporanea di Roma (2004); In moto, Galleria Massimo De Carlo, Milan (2001).
Recent group shows include: E la mia Patria è dove lerba trema, Galleria Nazionale dArte Moderna e Contemporanea, Rome (2023); Fuori Tutto, MAXXI Museo Nazionale delle Arti del XXI Secolo, Rome (2023); Building and Dreaming, By Art Matters, Hangzhou (2022); Meia-noite parte 2, Anozero 2122 - Bienal de Arte Contemporânea de Coimbra, Coimbra (2022); Congoville. Contemporary artists tracing colonial tracks, Middelheim Museum, Antwerp (2022); Extra Flags, Centro per lArte Contemporanea Luigi Pecci, Prato (2020); SUM Artists: Visual Diagrams & Systems-Based Explorations, Wellin Museum of Art, Clinton (2020).