VENICE.- Roberto Matta 1911-2002 at Ca Pesaro - Galleria Internazionale dArte Moderna is the first institutional exhibition in Italy dedicated to the Chilean artist; it aims to portray his eclectic personality and the expression of a wide range of ideas and modes of knowledge: scientific, cultural and philosophical. A citizen of the world, visionary, multifaceted artist, painter and draughtsman, architect and sculptor, as well as a militant figure, Roberto Sebastián Antonio Matta Echaurren (Santiago de Chile, 1911 - Civitavecchia, 2002) is certainly one of the most important artists of the twentieth century and, at the same time, among the least celebrated and represented figures in Italian museum collections.
The exhibition at Ca Pesaro is thus one of the projects of in-depth study, research and rediscovery of twentieth-century artists undertaken by the Galleria Internazionale dArte Moderna di Venezia, starting with the masterpieces held in its collection - in this case Alba sulla terra Dawn on Earth of 1952.
The exhibition also recalls and renews his historical connection with Venice. Matta arrived in the lagoon city for the first time in 1948 as one the artists of the Peggy Guggenheim collection hosted in the epoch-making exhibition at the Greek Pavilion. Again in Venice in 1953, it was on the occasion of the Matta 1949-1953 exhibition at the Museo Correr organised by Galleria del Cavallino and under the aegis of Carlo Cardazzo that a work by Matta entered an Italian public collection for the first time: displayed in the exhibition in the Sala Napoleonica, Alba sulla terra was purchased by Venice City for Ca Pesaro
The official protagonist of Surrealism, whose centenary will be celebrated in 2024, Matta developed his own particular visual language; his universe is surprising, complex, articulated, not ascribable to a single language. Irrationality, the unconscious, psychic automatism and deforming matter, the legacy of the surreal, are combined with the fundamental experience in Paris as a collaborator of Le Corbusier. At the same time, the geometric, architectural and constructive component in the exaggerated perspective and the trespassing into the fourth dimension, which characterise his mature production, preserve the echo of his love for poetry and his youthful closeness to Breton and friends. The exhibition intends to celebrate the brilliant and highly influential Chilean-born artist and his multifaceted creativity, expressed in the production of paintings, drawings, sculptures, architectural projects and design objects.
Moreover, while constantly transgressing the borderline between abstraction and figuration, he exerted a fundamental influence on the American abstract expressionists of the 1940s. Above all, Mattas work immediately presents itself as a participant in the world of science fiction, as a forerunner of an aesthetic in which the atmospheres of video games mix with those of street art.
The exhibition opens with a monumental work over 10 metres long, dating from the 1970s: Coïgitum (1972), which expresses the nature of a tireless experimenter in space. We enter Mattas world with a work that combines Surrealist imagery with architectural construction and the non-Euclidean breakthrough of space. The artist immediately presents himself as a participant in the world of science fiction and as the forerunner of an aesthetic, which he liked to define from Leonardo da Vinci to NASA, in which the sidereal atmospheres of video games and those of street art combine.
The exhibition then unfolds in line with a strict but not rigid chronology. In this way the different facets of Matta emerge, amid a series of monumental paintings and sculptures a forest of animal totems, mythological figures, towering seats, archetypes with Mediterranean and pre-Columbian echoes that invade the entrance, the courtyard and the museums hallway. Alongside them are contemporary design objects, such as the Malitte seating system: a modular composition of five blocks, now produced by Paradisoterrestre and available to the public at the exhibition. And there are glass sculptures and objects, the offspring of the extraordinary Venetian experience of the Fucina degli Angeli.
Last but not least, there is the militant Roberto Matta: art and politics merge in the post-war period, on the wave of atrocities and in the memory of Federico García Lorca, to whom he was deeply attached, killed by the Francoists. He lived the first season of the Cuban revolution with intensity, when European and Latin American artists gathered on the island, full of hopes for a tropical socialism. Among the most significant works exhibited at Ca Pesaro are the intense La Question, 1958, which recalls the issue of the Algerian War, the monumental La Chasse aux adolescents, a large canvas that evokes the French May revolution of 1968, which is dramatically topical today, and the intense El Burundu Burunda ha muerto of 1975, which deals with the theme of the Colombian civil war of the 1950s.
His sensitivity to ecological issues was also prophetic, expressed in his subjects and down to the practical application of his installations, made without frames, using recycled bases; today we would say, conceived with a view to sustainability. The exhibition layout of Ca Pesaro, realised with the Design Differente group, has also been developed in like manner.
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