'Salvatore Meo and the Poetics of Assemblage' on view at Boca Raton Museum of Art
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'Salvatore Meo and the Poetics of Assemblage' on view at Boca Raton Museum of Art
Salvatore Meo, New York Diptych, 1976, Mixed media, Courtesy Fondazione Salvatore Meo.



BOCA RATON, FLA.- Salvatore Meo (1914-2004) was a native of Philadelphia but made Rome his home since the 1950s. He saw this iconic city in its poverty stricken post-war years and witnessed the 1960s world of the glitterati portrayed in Fellini’s La Dolce Vita. Meo might even have watched the weeklong filming of Marcello Mastroianni and Anita Ekberg frolicking in the Trevi Fountain on the street just in front of his studio. That studio is now home to the Fondazione Salvatore Meo, devoted to the preservation and study of his work and directed by Mary Angela Schroth, who also founded Sala Uno, a space dedicated to contemporary art. She is the curator of Salvatore Meo and the Poetics of Assemblage, on view at the Boca Raton Museum of Art through July 2, 2017.

Meo exhibited widely in the 1950s through the mid 1970s and was an important and influential figure on the burgeoning contemporary art scene that included Alberto Burri, Luigi Fontana and Roberto Matta. He was visited and probably influenced the young Robert Rauschenberg and Cy Twombly who visited his Roman studio at the very beginning of their careers. Meo’s work was included in the landmark 1961 Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Art of Assemblage that also included Marcel Duchamp, Kurt Schwitters, and Pablo Picasso and exhibited in the US and Italy regularly. After his early success, Meo rejected the art world and became a recluse but continued to produce work in obscurity in his Roman studio until his death at the age of 90.

Meo also rejected the glamorous world of la dolce vita and the new Pop Art that was emerging. His work – which was at the forefront of the Arte Povera movement – consisted primarily of humble objects found on the street and preferred the poetic exploration of abandonment and decay. The materials for his assemblage consist of discarded gloves, doll parts, torn fabric, and rusted metal that had been casually thrown away. To paraphrase the late William C. Seitz, curator of MoMA’s The Art of Assemblage, the term “denotes not only a specific technique but a complex of attitudes and ideas…an investment of matter with spirit.” Salvatore Meo gave the detritus of everyday life a poetic soul.










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