Maurizio Cattelan's largest European exhibition ever opens at Monnaie de Paris
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Maurizio Cattelan's largest European exhibition ever opens at Monnaie de Paris
Maurizio Cattelan, Charlie don’t surf, 1997. Mannequin, table et chaise d'école, vêtements, peinture, chaussures, crayons. Photo: Zeno Zotti. Vue de l’exposition Maurizio Cattelan, Not Afraid of Love à la Monnaie de Paris, du 21 octobre 2016 au 8 janvier 2017.



PARIS.- This fall, following up on noteworthy, awe-inspiring artistic projects such as Stockhausen's Concert for Helicopters, John Baldessari's Your Name in Lights and Paul McCarthy's Chocolate Factory, Monnaie de Paris houses Maurizio Cattelan's largest European exhibition ever.

From 21 October 2016 to 8 January 2017, Not Afraid of Love, curated by Chiara Parisi, sets Maurizio Cattelan's comeback at Monnaie de Paris.

Five years ago, with his exhibition All at Guggenheim - a bow-out reference for some, a genius artistic suicide for others - we thought everything had been said. Just this once, Maurizio Cattelan shakes up our minds. He comes back with a post-requiem show.

"This exhibition it's the very first, after the Guggenheim show, that has more than three of my works altogether: it's a special editing of things I've done before retiring. Let's say it's a post-requiem show, where, like in a Poe's novel, I'm pretending to be dead, but I can still see and hear what happens around."

Nowadays, Maurizio Cattelan's artworks have largely exceeded enthusiasm, art critics or controversial arguments. They are imprinted on our mind; they are the embodiment of their era, both its muse and its interpretation.

"A simple provocation is forgotten in two days, a good work would last much longer."

Hallmarks of their era, his artworks are nonetheless timeless. Maurizio Cattelan's work transcends places and times to constantly gain new meanings and original interpretations that update their very nature.

Chosen pieces for the show at Monnaie de Paris are considered the most life-important and significant by the artist himself. For the first time, with Not Afraid of Love, we discover a very unique and intimate point of view of the artist through a specific layout and confrontation of his masterpieces.

Dramatically different and yet complementary to the Guggenheim's project, this new artist's proposal is not meant to be exhaustive but rather be a quest for meaning within a narrative show.

For Monnaie de Paris, the artist develops a post-requiem show and sets up a unique path in his career, thus showing how to build something new with existing works, demonstrating how spirited they are and able to create surprise, awkwardness and fascination. Thus he shows how his works are triggering individual stories that vary from a viewer to another.

If All, was saying it all, and was a way for Cattelan to be done with his artworks, Not Afraid of Love is certainly the chattiest exhibition ever conceived by the artist.

"My artworks are less funny than one can think. I have been pigeonholed as a funny artist since the beginning, but I'm much more serious than expected, and I don't resort to irony as much as my reputation depicted me. Things that maybe seemed a joke before are now taken more seriously."

Whether it is an irreverent portrait, astonishing or sometimes playful caricatures, the first thing one notices in Cattelan's artworks is the physical emotion that rises in every one of us. The burst of laugh suddenly turns into a sour laughter, and what petrified us at first glance gives us a faint smile the second after.

Cattelan's work seizes and exalts the human condition. His works are an ode to the human being in its fragility, its contradictions, its paradoxes, its most creative aspects and its most destructive ones. They also are a projection of the identity crisis we all go through: who am I when collective is taking over individual?

When his works of arts deal with the death, they call in Cioran "We do not rush toward death, we flee the catastrophe of birth, survivors struggling to forget it. Fear of death is merely the projection into the future of a fear which dates back to our first moment of life." Cattelan seems to play hide and seek with Duchamp's tombstone's epitaph, it's always the others who die.

Maurizio Cattelan chooses the very core of one of the most beautiful Palaces on the river Seine, the Monnaie de Paris, a National Manufacture, to get back to work.










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