Exhibition at mumok follows the relational thinking of Medardo Rosso
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


Exhibition at mumok follows the relational thinking of Medardo Rosso
Medardo Rosso, Ecce Puer, post 1920 ca. (1906). Wax over plaster, 47 x 34 x 29 cm. Photo: Galleria Russo, Rome. Courtesy: Federico Fabbri, London.



VIENNA.- Artist and artisan, art theorist and proto-installation artist, master of high-publicity performances and rival of Auguste Rodin—Medardo Rosso (b. 1858 in Turin, d. 1928 in Milan) was one of the great pioneers of Modernism and a figure as extraordinary as he was eccentric.

While Rosso was indeed close to the Impressionist movement, he operated on the fringes and in the liminal areas in terms of method, media, and material—thus captivating the minds of many artists to this day. At the same time, his oeuvre is hard to grasp and, unlike Rodin’s, has remained virtually hidden from the broader public’s perception. Now, mumok presents a comprehensive retrospective of the artist with more than fifty sculptures and a large selection of photographs, photocollages, and drawings—while also building on the earliest holdings on the museum’s collection.

The exhibition follows the relational thinking of Medardo Rosso, who frequently exhibited his output in “conversation” with comparable works, and contextualizes his oeuvre with selected works by about fifty artists—among them Edgar Degas, Constantin Brâncuși, Louise Bourgeois, Jasper Johns, Robert Morris, Lynda Benglis, Eva Hesse, Marisa Merz, and Phyllida Barlow—who resonate directly or indirectly with Rosso. The show illustrates how Rosso’s work was a clarion call for crucial paradigm shifts in twentieth century art. From the monumental to the anti-monumental; from form to material; from originality and uniqueness to serial (self-)repetition and reprise; from the final, completed work to the ever-malleable, to the process and the event; from autonomy to spatial and contextual orientation; and ultimately to a resonance with the environment, the reciprocity of subject and object, seer and seen, touching and being touched.

Excepting a year of study at the Accademia di Brera in Milan, Medardo Rosso was self-taught. Born in Turin in 1858, he was a permanent resident of Paris from 1889 on, where he befriended Auguste Rodin and became his collaborator and later rival. Both artists sought to radically redefine the ostensibly unmodern medium of sculpture, which had been stuck in the confines of the monumental. Rosso tackled this by making the radical attempt to bring sculpture closer to life and to “animate” the medium. In their intimate scale, fragility and openness, his kinetic “blurry” sculptures not only overcome the typically male tradition of the heroic monument built for eternity. It is also because Rosso saw himself as a category-defying citizen of the world “born on a train”—in opposition to the burgeoning nationalism of his time— that he avoided portraying glorious heroic tales in favor of depicting ordinary people going about their day, visibly subject to time. Rosso’s “blurry” sculptures not only reflect the radical changes in perception of his time but also deal with the social upheavals around 1900, in a society marked by tremendous processes of modernization and alienation.

For his sculptures, Rosso often reverted to bronze, which he cast himself using the age-old method of lost-wax casting. He also employed wax and plaster, so-called “poor” materials that had hitherto been deemed unworthy of art and used in the sculptural preproduction process only but were more permeable, malleable, and organic than common stone. Rosso also devised strategies to shift the focus to the material and the creative process. He developed essential media- and material- aesthetic considerations on sculpture and the relationship between the figure and its environment through the medium of photography, which he systematically included in his creative process from 1900 on and exhibited together with his sculptures as ensembles. He repeatedly made a show of casting figures in his studio, thus emphasizing—unlike most of his contemporaries—his dual role of artist and artisan.

Rosso was only to work on about forty subjects in total. In lieu of a final piece we are presented the repetitive loop of a potentially incompletable return to a moment once begun and continually revived anew. He used the reproduction technologies of casting and photography, while avoiding the familiar hierarchies of original and copy, of production and reproduction, calling into question the fledgling commercial art market and its logics of exploitation. At the same time, Rosso wanted to use his methodology to enter a dialog with the world around him, which he perceived as being in a state of constant flux, and to keep encountering it in fresh, new ways.

Especially in a time when rethinking the relationship between material bodies and their increasingly technologically networked environment is becoming ever more pressing, Rosso’s work appears “alarmingly alive”—to borrow the words of sculptor Phyllida Barlow.

Medardo Rosso’s busy exhibition activities took him all over Europe. His first appearance in Austria was in 1903 as part of the Impressionism exhibition at the Vienna Secession. In 1905, Kunstsalon Artaria at Kohlmarkt presented his first comprehensive solo show. Rosso’s exhibition practice, with which he directed his audience’s perception, attracted a lot of attention at the time. In a newspaper review, art critic Ludwig Hevesi wrote that Rosso presented his objects in iron-framed glass cases that he had made himself and that he strategically positioned employing electric lighting. For this purpose, he insisted that the exhibition architecture remained scant—an unusual design element at the time. Another thing specific to Rosso’s exhibition practice was the incorporation of works by contemporaries like Rodin and copies of works from other periods of art history.

One hundred and twenty years after his last presentation in Vienna, mumok is now taking Rosso’s principle of comparative viewing as a starting point to show his work in the spirit of an expanded retrospective in the larger context of the artistic developments of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In select juxtapositions with more than eighty works by artists from a variety of international collections, Rosso’s experimental approach emerges as one that has continued to shape the artistic landscape.

Artists in dialog with Medardo Rosso

Giovanni Anselmo / Guillaume Apollinaire / Francis Bacon / Nairy Baghramian / Olga Balema / Phyllida Barlow / Lynda Benglis / Louise Bourgeois / Anton Giulio Bragaglia / Constantin Brâncuși / Eugène Carrière / John Chamberlain / Honoré Daumier / Edgar Degas / Raymond Duchamp-Villon / Luciano Fabro / Loïe Fuller / Isa Genzken / Alberto Giacometti / Robert Gober / David Hammons / Eva Hesse / Jasper Johns / Hans Josephsohn / Ellsworth Kelly / Käthe Kollwitz / Yayoi Kusama / Maria Lassnig / Sherrie Levine / Matthijs Maris / Marisa Merz / Amedeo Modigliani / Robert Morris / Juan Muñoz / Senga Nengudi / Carol Rama / Auguste Rodin / Richard Serra / Edward Steichen / Georges Seurat / Erin Shirreff / Alina Szapocznikow / Paul Thek / Rosemarie Trockel / Hannah Villiger / Andy Warhol / Rebecca Warren / James Welling / Francesca Woodman

Curated by Heike Eipeldauer

Exhibition design by Florian Pumhösl and Walter Kräutler

A comprehensive catalog will be published in conjunction with the exhibition. To make Rosso’s artistic practice in all its facets known to a wide audience, the book will present new research and perspectives. Along with an extensive chronology of works and high-quality illustrated plates, the catalog will include contributions by Jo Applin, Birgit Brunk, Heike Eipeldauer, Georges Didi-Huberman, Ines Gebetsroither, Francesco Guzzetti, Lisa Le Feuvre, Megan R. Luke, Esmee Postma, Nina Schallenberg, Francesco Stocchi, and Matthew S. Witkovsky as well as a conversation between Heike Eipeldauer, Florian Pumhösl, and Matthew S. Witkovsky. The book will be published by Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther und Franz König, Cologne.










Today's News

October 18, 2024

'CrossingBorders: WE ARE ALL IMMIGRANTS' opens at Westbeth Gallery

Original oil paintings by Edward Seago and Le Pho sail past estimates at Ahlers & Ogletree

Milestone aims to please collectors with Oct. 26-27 Premier Fall Firearms Auction

Canadiana and folk art lead the way in two Miller & Miller auctions

Tate St Ives opens the first major UK exhibition of Małgorzata Mirga-Tas

Christie's announces auction benefiting UNHCR

Exhibition at mumok follows the relational thinking of Medardo Rosso

Exhibition brings together around 12 works by André Griffo

Perrotin opens Emma Webster's first solo exhibition in Paris

New Emily Carr acquisition unveiled at Audain Art Museum

Ludwig Museum presents a selection of works from its collection exclusively by women

Exhibition focuses on the social significance of female saints in Orthodox Christian art

National Portrait Gallery reveals its programme of major exhibitions and partnerships for 2025

Halle für Kunst Steiermark opens an exhibition of works by Mathias Poledna

Exhibition at Colnaghi explores the tension between beauty and its inevitable decay

Jack Hanley Gallery opens Marie Lorenz's fourth solo exhibition with the gallery

"Paul Gardère: Vantage Points" exhibition on view at The Cooper Union

Exhibition presents works by artists who respond to the place of rivers in our lives

Exhibition takes an unusual and surprising route through the history of fashion

Poker in Art: Exploring Famous Scenes from Canvas to Pop Culture

Experience the magic and adventure of Throne and Liberty: Embark on your heroic journey!

Are Free Credit No Deposit Bonuses in Malaysia Really Worth It?

The Intersection of Art and Gaming: How Digital Creations in Social Casinos Echo Traditional Art Forms

Top-5 Proxy Servers in 2024 (in terms of pricing, security, and service)

Top Roofing Materials for Your Next Roof Installation: What to Consider

Why is Musang King the King of Durians?

Your Guide to Choosing the Best Wedding Dress for Every Season

The Benefits of Setting Up a Secure Trust for Your Estate

How much does it cost to hire an SEO company?




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful