Articles by: I. a.

  • Art & Culture

    Renato Miracco on Stella and Italian Art in the U.S. Museums

    i-Italy spoke with Renato Miracco before his presentation "Stella and the Futurists: Italian Itineraries in the American Museums." 

    What is the purpose of this particular panel on Joseph Stella, sponsored and organized by the Inserra Chair?

    The panel although centered around the figure of Joseph Stella, is also inserted in a broader context, that of creating a sort of an Italian path in every American museum. This project, created by me, materializes in the selection of Italian works belonging to the collections of these various museums, on which then historical research is conducted with regard to the dates, reasons and ways of their acquisition. This is one of the cultural events being held in the celebration of the 150 years of the Italian Unification that has just passed.

    Until now, I have been able to accomplish this in 54 museums, beyond the 22 museums of the Smithsonian in Washington. Also here in the Museum of Newark, in the numerous works of Stella, I have detected a small Italian path. And today this path is unveiled and can be followed be it via the small guided tour that we are about to take or by the panel which will describe precisely the characteristics of Stella, his relationship with Marinetti, his relationship with all the futurists, his vision of Futurism and how deeply he was influenced by Futurism in particular and therefore, certainly how it impacted all his works. We will talk about him meeting the Futurists in Paris, first in 1909 then in 1912 and his relationship with them, Marinetti in particular, about his relationship with Balla, about how he gets inspired by it all. Stella at the same time is considered by them, and especially by Marinetti, to be a great friend and supporter of the Futurism experience. Stella also had a considerable collection of Futuristic works, both painting and letters, which later is sold due to his health problems. This was the great Joseph Stella, little known by a large audience.

    This is a strange fact, given that he practically brings Futurism to America, and if one goes to a website (not an academic one, but one such as Wikipedia) this important fact is omitted.

    Exactly. Exactly. I would like to say that this is incredible. It is right to discover this fact, and this artist even if only now. Discover how he worked, how he revised Futurism, what strikes him about it. The speech today will address that subject, his relationship with Marinetti,  Balla and Boccioni, and that which strikes him in the works of Balla and Boccioni. Then I will try to demonstrate the intensity of Futurism, the impact of Futurism, and I plan to stage a small onomatopoeic performance, which I think will make everyone understand that which was happening during the boom of Futurism in city squares.


    One thing comes to my mind, the fact that Italy is best known for the Renaissance, a period during which artists and writers were looking to the past, to the Romans and the Greeks for their inspiration, Futurism on the other hand was a movement that emphasized themes associated with contemporary concepts and those of the future and forgetting the past, therefore the complete opposite of the Renaissance.

    Many people are used to this idea of Italy. The Italy of the Renaissance. I instead, during my whole career, have always been captivated by another aspect of Italy. I was a curator of the Metropolitan Museum for years, and one of my major exhibitions was that of Georgio Morandi.  On Morandi, I held 87 conferences and led 95 groups, 40 television interviews. I practically made people discover Morandi and with him, another point of view on Italian art, one that goes unnoticed. America at the time of Stella, was still under the influence of Cubism, and was still looking for its own identity, especially cultural one. Post-Impressionism was still in place, it was still influenced by European Impressionists, so Futurism was considered a European craze. Stella instead got addicted to the idea of Futurism.

    I see this, as an important fact that the public should be aware of, that Italy is not only about the Renaissance but it is as present in modern and contemporary art world.

    Italy definitely has a presence in the art world beyond the Renaissance. Right now we have Maurizio Cattelan at the Guggenheim, and he is Italian. Someone studying futurism for example, will find relevant Italian art. All one has to do is be able to shift his or her mentality. I just inaugurated a Renaissance exhibition last Friday at the National Gallery of Washington dedicated to Antico, one of the major sculptors of the time and people were wowed. When I draw the Italian path through the American Museum Institution, each time I emphasize the point that this is a Renaissance piece, yes, this is an old piece; this is a modern piece, this is a contemporary piece; but they are all on the same path. That is, on the same path one can find many different aspects.

    Do you think the fact that Stella was an immigrant who came here at a young age, he was 18 years old, could have been something that has pushed him into futurism? Futurism being everything novel, everything modern, everything that America would offer at that point.

     

    No, it was probably the fact that Futurism was new at that time. Immigrants are people that are looking for identity, and if one is looking for a new identity here and the suit doesn’t fit, they look for something they can bring to this new reality. Probably immigrants, I don’t know if that’s correct, are much more open-minded to reality, to changes, because if one is arriving in a different country, they have to be able to be open, to adapt to the new. It makes them open to new ideas. The panel touches on this subject.

  • Events: Reports

    Premio Selezione 2011 @ Two Young Italian artists. Nicola Pecoraro and Riccardo Previdi


    The Italian Cultural Institute of New York (686 Park Ave) currently hosts an exhibition of the winners of the Premio Selezione 2011. On view are the captivating works of two very promising and talented young Italian artists Nicola Pecoraro and Riccardo Previdi. Both artists’ works continued to stand out during the different phases of the competition’s selection process judged by internationally recognized curators, critics and contemporary art experts, and were selected as winners by the final jury, composed of Riccardo Viale, Alvise Chevallard, Laura Barreca, Paolo Colombo, Pepi Marchetti, Beatrice Merz and Ruben Levi.


    The Roman native Nicola Pecoraro (1978), consumed by the study of new aesthetical strategies exploring painting, sculpture and installation, presented a sculpture titled Triton. It is an upright fountain created from cluster of materials, painted using mixed media. This piece is completed with an array of lights that flicker and change, giving diverse views of parts of the sculpture and making each glimpse of it more interesting than the previous one. The piece builds a relationship with both the viewer and the space in which it is exhibited. It mesmerizes and intrigues.


    Riccardo Previdi (Milan 1974) displays an exhibit of works titled Wrong Test. Print tests (such as diagrams used for the purpose of calibrating printers) and qualitative tests of consumer goods, images found on the internet are reprinted on A4 paper, crumpled and in turn photographed to be then reproduced with a laser plotter on PVC are meant to reveal the outcome of procedure involved in image production, demonstrating how image can create a surreal perspective in the contemporary collective imagination.


    The exhibit, curated by Laura Barreca is on view until November 28th, 2011 at the IIC and is accompanied by the artist’s book published by Nero. For more information visit: http://www.iicnewyork.esteri.it/IIC_NewYork/Menu/Gli_Eventi/