Ierimonti

Mila Tenaglia (December 02, 2015)
Ierimonti Gallery is delighted to present two opening: “Look very closely”, an exhibition featuring some of the most representative works of Marcel Duchamp and Gianfranco Baruchello and FUSION | PRINTS & JEWELS a group exhibition that emphasizes the graphic works of some of the most important artists of the postwar period.


Ierimonti Gallery will hosts two innovative and unconventional exhibition: "Look very closely" and  FUSION | PRINTS & JEWELS.


"Look very closely” will feature some of the most representative works of Marcel Duchamp and Gianfranco Baruchello. Since the Sixties Gianfranco Baruchello has worked with different materials and multidisciplinary approach, using a variety of media and techniques including drawings, writings and assemblage.


Objets trouvés and writings, images and words alphabets, archived and catalogued in personal

collections with a Duchampian attitude (“I have set up an archive a rhyming book of the culture I have been using it now for quite some times objects men books hypotheses  etiologies fables techniques scores electrical household appliances classified structures in perfect disorder”) are fundamental in Baruchello’s artistic project. With his artistic vocabulary derived from prefab images catalogues belonging to the everyday universe, Baruchello creates miniature worlds where he suggests delicate mental associations.


Duchamp used to say that his ambition was “to put painting once again at the service of the

mind”: as for Baruchello images become thinkable, in an art that is no longer subject to the aesthetic beauty, but that is the beauty of indifference.


The mental component is always  accompanied by a thinner one, reminiscent of the subconscious in a multiplicity of meanings  that are hidden in a work like the Large Glass. If Duchamp here highlights the refusal of the  concept of retinal painting, with the readymade he takes the next step, elevating everyday objects to works of art.


And through these subjects that are elevated to a work of art, Duchamp begins to make a series of short circuits of language, where the word begins to exist as a separate entity from its meaning. The multiple identities and meanings of the artworks presented forces us to “look very closely”, as Duchamp used to say about Baruchello’s work.


The second exhibition, FUSION | PRINTS & JEWELS, will shiow a group exhibition that emphasizes the graphic works of some of the most important artists of the postwar period.


Featured in the show there will be Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Tom Wesselman, Bruce Nauman, Christo, Edward Kienholz combined with artists who put their creativity in the field of jewelry, like Yoko. The exhibition explores Graphic Works as a culmination of the original work through a different and even more refined technique.


The stunning array of jewelry are designed and manufactured by different artists in collaboration with the Marylart. These are precious sculptures in motion each of which is numbered and signed by the artist who created it. Through each of these creations there is less a distinction between works of art and jewelry, thus giving life to the small masterpieces, created by experimenting with new techniques and unconventional materials.

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