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Wednesday, October 29, 2025 |
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| Castello di Rivoli unveils major Enrico David retrospective |
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Enrico David, Le Bave (Solar Anus), 2023. Patinated cold cast bronze, patinated copper, sponge, 182×327×54 cm. Courtesy the artist and Michael Werner Gallery.
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TURIN.- Castello di Rivoli Museo dArte Contemporanea presents Domani torno (Im back tomorrow), a comprehensive retrospective dedicated to Enrico David (Ancona, 1966). Curated by Marianna Vecellio, the exhibition offers an in-depth overview of the artists practice, spanning painting, textile works, drawing, sculpture, and immersive installations, all exploring the inner dimensions of the contemporary human condition.
Specifically conceived for the Manica Lunga at Castello di Rivoli, the exhibition unfolds through a dialogue between figuration and abstraction, focusing on the body as a metaphor for transformation. With a layout that evokes theatrical scenography and design displays, the exhibition retraces the key moments of Davids artistic production, including new works created for the occasion.
Domani torno is both a personal and artistic journey: tracing Davids origins in Ancona to his move to London in 1986, the exhibition follows the development of a practice grounded in his quest for a linguistic universe in which to exist. Through various media, David explores the human figure as a site of metamorphosis and reflection. In this journey, drawing plays a central role as a unifying language, since, as the artist states, the space of dreams and the space of drawing are both infinite.
Many works arise from the urgent need to process traumatic experiences, such as the sudden loss of his father. Creativity, for me, is an opportunity to change the condition of pain, David says. It is a redemption, an alternative destination to suffering. Art is what makes reality more bearable. Starting in the late 1990s, Davids installations became fully interdisciplinary worlds: visionary stages weaving together current events, memory, popular culture, and theatrical rhetoric. Notable examples include Madreperlage (2003), Absuction Cardigan (2009), and Ultra Paste (2007), where the artist constructs scenographic devices imbued with emotional and symbolic tension.
Over time, the artists practice has evolved toward increasing formal synthesis, culminating in sculptural work that delves into the face as a site of connection and knowledge. Beginning with the exhibition Life Sentences (2014), David investigates the face through hyper-expressive, material renderings in wax to evoke emotion and intensity. Among the works on display are: Trenches to Reason (2021), two suspended forms blending geology and technology; Tutto il Resto Spegnere, presented at the Italian Pavilion of the Venice Biennale in 2019; and a selection of sculptural studies including Sign for Lost Mountaineers Hair Grooming Station (2004), Pebble Lady (2014), and Racket II (2017). Numerous drawings, newly produced large-scale paintings, tapestries, and embroidered canvases, along with the ongoing Teatrini series (begun in 2005), complete the exhibition.
In an era dominated by artificial intelligence and digital dematerialization, Enrico Davids work stands as a statement of resistance to decoding, and as an ode to the physical body, sensory experience, and the power of imagination, as the curator Marianna Vecellio says. The exhibition offers a reflection on contemporary identity, particularly the relationship between body, gender, and self-perception. In my work, gender has a kind of unconscious irrelevance, the artist says. Identities brush against each other, they exchange, they are put back into question.
Domani torno is ultimately an invitation to reclaim ones own imaginary worldboth a visual and conceptual exploration of the human being in constant transformation.
The exhibition is accompanied by a bilingual EnglishItalian catalogue published by Walther König. The book features previously unpublished essays and interviews by the exhibitions curator at the Castello di Rivoli, Marianna Vecellio, and the Museums Director, Francesco Manacorda, as well as philosopher Federico Campagna and art historians Dawn Ades and Polly Staple.
The exhibition will also be an opportunity to present Untitled, 2024-2025 in Italy, produced by Castello di Rivoli Museo dArte Contemporanea in collaboration with Kunsthaus Zürich, supported by the Directorate-General for Contemporary Creativity of the Italian Ministry of Culture under the Italian Council 2025 program. The work will be significant in the exhibition itinerary and reflects Enrico Davids commitment to a mature sculptural practice, focused on material and formal experimentation.
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