Untitled Art
Gallery is locate in Booth #A54
VIP Preview:
Monday, November 28, 1:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Opening Hours:
Tuesday, November 29, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, November 30, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, December 1, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Friday, December 2, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, December 3, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Location
Ocean Drive and 12th Street, Miami Beach, Florida
Gallery is locate in Booth #A54
VIP Preview:
Monday, November 28, 1:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Opening Hours:
Tuesday, November 29, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, November 30, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Thursday, December 1, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Friday, December 2, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, December 3, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Location
Ocean Drive and 12th Street, Miami Beach, Florida
Daria Dmytrenko (1993, Dnipropetrovsk, Ucraina) vive e lavora a Venezia. Dopo la prima formazione artistica a Dnipropetrovsk, ha frequentato i corsi di pittura presso l’Accademia Nazionale di Arti Visive e Architettura di Kiev (2012-15) e si è diplomata all’Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia nel 2021. Attraverso la pittura, l’artista esplora l’espressione visiva del subconscio, utilizzando gli impulsi intuitivi come strumento per far emergere i ricordi più profondi e trasformarli in composizione. Tra le mostre in cui sono state esposte le sue opere: Journey to the center of the mind, Stems (Paris, 2024) What’s behind the gloom, Setareh (Düsseldorf, 2023), Degree Show II, Palazzo Monti (Brescia, 2021); Extraordinario, Vulcano agenzia VEGA (Venezia, 2020); 103ma Collettiva Giovani Artisti, Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa, Galleria Piazza San Marco (Venezia, 2020); Spin Off, Calle Lunga Santa Caterina (Venezia, 2019); Speculum mundi, Davide Gallo (Milano, 2018); Upon a Time, Galleria Eduardo Secci (Firenze, 2022); Fluuuuuido, Cassina Projects (Milano, 2022).
Daria Dmytrenko (1993, Dnipropetrovsk, Ucraina) vive e lavora a Venezia. Dopo la prima formazione artistica a Dnipropetrovsk, ha frequentato i corsi di pittura presso l’Accademia Nazionale di Arti Visive e Architettura di Kiev (2012-15) e si è diplomata all’Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia nel 2021. Attraverso la pittura, l’artista esplora l’espressione visiva del subconscio, utilizzando gli impulsi intuitivi come strumento per far emergere i ricordi più profondi e trasformarli in composizione. Tra le mostre in cui sono state esposte le sue opere: Journey to the center of the mind, Stems (Paris, 2024) What’s behind the gloom, Setareh (Düsseldorf, 2023), Degree Show II, Palazzo Monti (Brescia, 2021); Extraordinario, Vulcano agenzia VEGA (Venezia, 2020); 103ma Collettiva Giovani Artisti, Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa, Galleria Piazza San Marco (Venezia, 2020); Spin Off, Calle Lunga Santa Caterina (Venezia, 2019); Speculum mundi, Davide Gallo (Milano, 2018); Upon a Time, Galleria Eduardo Secci (Firenze, 2022); Fluuuuuido, Cassina Projects (Milano, 2022).
Michael Staniak was born in Melbourne in 1982 where he currently lives and works.
He obtained a BFA and a MFA from the Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne, as well as a BA in Digital Media Communications from the Middle Tennessee State University.
Staniak was the protagonist of personal exhibitions at the Eduardo Secci Gallery, Florence (2018); Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles (2017); Museum of Contemporary Art in St. Louis, St. Louis (2015); Annarunna Gallery, Naples (2015); Artereal Gallery, Sydney (2014).
Among the group exhibitions we mention the exhibitions at the galleries: Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles (2018); Eduardo Secci Contemporary, Mexico (2018); Homeostatis Pavilion, São Paulo, Brazil; The Journal Gallery, Brooklyn (2017); Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne (2016); Blain Southern, Berlin (2015); The Moving Museum, Istanbul (2014); Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2014); Horton Gallery, New York (2013); Northern Territory Center for Contemporary Art, Melbourne (2012).
In 2017, the Contemporary Art Museum of St. Louis published a monograph of his work, titled IMG_, which was then reported in numerous publications, including Artforum, Flashart Italy, Vault, Australia and Leap Beijing.
Michael Staniak was born in Melbourne in 1982 where he currently lives and works.
He obtained a BFA and a MFA from the Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne, as well as a BA in Digital Media Communications from the Middle Tennessee State University.
Staniak was the protagonist of personal exhibitions at the Eduardo Secci Gallery, Florence (2018); Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles (2017); Museum of Contemporary Art in St. Louis, St. Louis (2015); Annarunna Gallery, Naples (2015); Artereal Gallery, Sydney (2014).
Among the group exhibitions we mention the exhibitions at the galleries: Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles (2018); Eduardo Secci Contemporary, Mexico (2018); Homeostatis Pavilion, São Paulo, Brazil; The Journal Gallery, Brooklyn (2017); Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne (2016); Blain Southern, Berlin (2015); The Moving Museum, Istanbul (2014); Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2014); Horton Gallery, New York (2013); Northern Territory Center for Contemporary Art, Melbourne (2012).
In 2017, the Contemporary Art Museum of St. Louis published a monograph of his work, titled IMG_, which was then reported in numerous publications, including Artforum, Flashart Italy, Vault, Australia and Leap Beijing.
Marco Eusepi (Anzio, 1991) lives and works between Anzio and Rome. In 2015 he awarded his first bachelor degree in Painting and in 2018 a Master Degree in Graphic Art at Academy of Fine Arts of Rome. His current research investigates the natural element as a pretext for a metalinguistic reflection on painting. In his pictorial grammar, the surface becomes a field of formal deconstruction where different layers merge, questioning the compositional hierarchies through the creation of new materic organisms. Marco Eusepi has been the protagonist of several solo-shows: Galleria Eduardo Secci, Florence (2021); Spaziomensa, Rome (2021); Albert Van Dyck Museum, Schilde, Antwerp (2019). Among his groups exhibitions: Materia Nova, Roma nuove generazioni a confronto, Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Rome (2022); Ineffable Worlds, Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong (2021); Opening Exhibition, Spaziomensa, Rome (2020); Segno Contemporaneo, Dingyuan International Art Center, Beijing (2019); Academia Italia, VII Saint Petersburg International Cultural Forum, Saint Petersburg (2019); Now and Forward II, Gallery of Arts, Temple University, Rome (2019); Hanji – opere in carta, Korean Cultural Institute, Rome (2018); Masters Salon Painting 2017, Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Antwerp (2017).
Marco Eusepi (Anzio, 1991) lives and works between Anzio and Rome. In 2015 he awarded his first bachelor degree in Painting and in 2018 a Master Degree in Graphic Art at Academy of Fine Arts of Rome. His current research investigates the natural element as a pretext for a metalinguistic reflection on painting. In his pictorial grammar, the surface becomes a field of formal deconstruction where different layers merge, questioning the compositional hierarchies through the creation of new materic organisms. Marco Eusepi has been the protagonist of several solo-shows: Galleria Eduardo Secci, Florence (2021); Spaziomensa, Rome (2021); Albert Van Dyck Museum, Schilde, Antwerp (2019). Among his groups exhibitions: Materia Nova, Roma nuove generazioni a confronto, Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Rome (2022); Ineffable Worlds, Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong (2021); Opening Exhibition, Spaziomensa, Rome (2020); Segno Contemporaneo, Dingyuan International Art Center, Beijing (2019); Academia Italia, VII Saint Petersburg International Cultural Forum, Saint Petersburg (2019); Now and Forward II, Gallery of Arts, Temple University, Rome (2019); Hanji – opere in carta, Korean Cultural Institute, Rome (2018); Masters Salon Painting 2017, Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Antwerp (2017).
Marco De Sanctis(1983, Italy), lives and works in Brussels. the artist studied at the royal academy in Bruxelles, at the Hogeschool Sint-Lukas and at the academy of fine arts in Brera Marco de Sanctis work addresses issues related to the concept of the image and the creative process or construction thereof, through relations that develop between drawing, different techniques and the surrounding environment. Superpositions are followed by patiently realized traits that mark the passage of time and create new memories, new tracks, new images. Marco’s work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions both nationally and internationally in venues including: (2020) Appocundria, Dauwens & Beernaert gallery, Brussels, Be, (2019)Andante, Biennale de La Louviere, Be. (2018) Les Portes Royales, Art on paper, Art Fair, Boxar, Brussels, Be. Crepusculo, Artissima, Art Fair, Turin, Italy (2021) Art Rotterdam Fair, Van Nelle fabriek, Rotterdam, Nl. (2020) Transalantico, Mana Contemporary art center Jesey city, USA (2019) ,Ossessione, Palazzo Monti, Brescia Italy,(2018) Art Brussels 36° edition. (2012) Images de soi – Images de l’autre, Jewish Museum, Brussels, Be.
Marco De Sanctis(1983, Italy), lives and works in Brussels. the artist studied at the royal academy in Bruxelles, at the Hogeschool Sint-Lukas and at the academy of fine arts in Brera Marco de Sanctis work addresses issues related to the concept of the image and the creative process or construction thereof, through relations that develop between drawing, different techniques and the surrounding environment. Superpositions are followed by patiently realized traits that mark the passage of time and create new memories, new tracks, new images. Marco’s work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions both nationally and internationally in venues including: (2020) Appocundria, Dauwens & Beernaert gallery, Brussels, Be, (2019)Andante, Biennale de La Louviere, Be. (2018) Les Portes Royales, Art on paper, Art Fair, Boxar, Brussels, Be. Crepusculo, Artissima, Art Fair, Turin, Italy (2021) Art Rotterdam Fair, Van Nelle fabriek, Rotterdam, Nl. (2020) Transalantico, Mana Contemporary art center Jesey city, USA (2019) ,Ossessione, Palazzo Monti, Brescia Italy,(2018) Art Brussels 36° edition. (2012) Images de soi – Images de l’autre, Jewish Museum, Brussels, Be.
Levi van Veluw was born in the Dutch town of Hoevelaken in 1985 and studied at the ArtEZ Institute of the Arts in Arnhem. He lives and works in Amsterdam. Since graduating in 2007, he has produced multi- disciplinary works that spans scenographic installations, photographs, videos, sculptures and drawings. Van Veluw bases his practice around the idea of an alternate reality, creating a visual laboratory where both order and chaos are present. The artist has extensively investigated the relativity of matter and draws on scientific theories and physics to approach various existential dilemmas. His dark and sensory installations encourage the viewer to reflect on the development of a new knowledge, stemming from the desire for a regulated universe, while acknowledging the rational impossibility of total control.
Among his personal recent exhibitions we remind: Videocittà Rome, Italy (2021); Eduardo Secci, Florence, Italy (2020); Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede,The Netherlands (2020); Praz-Delavallade, Paris (2020); Het HEM, Zaandam, The Netherlands (2020); Tenuta Dello Scompiglio, Lucca, Italy (2019); Domaine de Kerguéhennec, Bignan, France (2018); La Galerie Particulière, Paris (2017); Galerie Ron Mandos, Amsterdam (2019); Rosenfeld Porcini Gallery, London (2016). Among group shows we remind: Museo Kranenburgh, Bergen, The Netherlands (2017); labellisée Normandie Impressonniste, Jumièges, France (2016); Museum de Fundatie, Zwolle, the Netherlands (2016); Maddox Arts, London (2015). Van Veluw’s works have also been widely shown at international art fairs such as Zona Maco (2018); The Armory Show, New York (2017); Art Brussels (2016); Chicago Art Fair (2016); Volta Basel (2012) and the Barcelona Loop Fair Barcelona (2014). The work of Levi Veluw has been exhibited internationally in leading museums and institutions, and is included in both public and private collections, including the Borusan Contemporary Collection, Caldic Collection, Ekard Collection and KPMG Art Collection.
Levi van Veluw was born in the Dutch town of Hoevelaken in 1985 and studied at the ArtEZ Institute of the Arts in Arnhem. He lives and works in Amsterdam. Since graduating in 2007, he has produced multi- disciplinary works that spans scenographic installations, photographs, videos, sculptures and drawings. Van Veluw bases his practice around the idea of an alternate reality, creating a visual laboratory where both order and chaos are present. The artist has extensively investigated the relativity of matter and draws on scientific theories and physics to approach various existential dilemmas. His dark and sensory installations encourage the viewer to reflect on the development of a new knowledge, stemming from the desire for a regulated universe, while acknowledging the rational impossibility of total control.
Among his personal recent exhibitions we remind: Videocittà Rome, Italy (2021); Eduardo Secci, Florence, Italy (2020); Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede,The Netherlands (2020); Praz-Delavallade, Paris (2020); Het HEM, Zaandam, The Netherlands (2020); Tenuta Dello Scompiglio, Lucca, Italy (2019); Domaine de Kerguéhennec, Bignan, France (2018); La Galerie Particulière, Paris (2017); Galerie Ron Mandos, Amsterdam (2019); Rosenfeld Porcini Gallery, London (2016). Among group shows we remind: Museo Kranenburgh, Bergen, The Netherlands (2017); labellisée Normandie Impressonniste, Jumièges, France (2016); Museum de Fundatie, Zwolle, the Netherlands (2016); Maddox Arts, London (2015). Van Veluw’s works have also been widely shown at international art fairs such as Zona Maco (2018); The Armory Show, New York (2017); Art Brussels (2016); Chicago Art Fair (2016); Volta Basel (2012) and the Barcelona Loop Fair Barcelona (2014). The work of Levi Veluw has been exhibited internationally in leading museums and institutions, and is included in both public and private collections, including the Borusan Contemporary Collection, Caldic Collection, Ekard Collection and KPMG Art Collection.
Giò Pomodoro (1930-2002) was born on 17 November 1930 in Orciano di Pesaro, in the countryside of the Marche near Urbino.
In 1945 his family moved to Pesaro, where Giò attended the Technical Institute for Surveyors, earning his diploma in 1951. From 1952 to 1953 he performed his military service in Siena, Bologna, and Florence. In this last city he visited the museums daily and frequented the artistic milieu revolving around Galleria Numero, where he also exhibited his first “informel“ experimentations.
After the death of his father, Giò settled in Milan with his mother, his sister, and his brother, Arnaldo. The artistic and cultural scene in Milan which he frequented at the time was particularly active. After holding exhibitions with his brother at Galleria del Naviglio in Milan and Galleria Il Cavallino in Venice, which were directed by the brothers Carlo and Renato Cardazzo, Giò was invited to the 1956 Venice Biennale, where he exhibited a series of silver works cast over cuttlefish bones that he had dedicated to the poet Ezra Pound and begun creating in 1954.
The following year he collaborated actively with the journal “Il Gesto” and participated in the exhibition Arte Nucleare at Galleria San Fedele in Milan. Along with Dorazio, Novelli, Turcato, Tancredi, Perilli, Fontana, and his brother, Arnaldo, he would go on to organise the exhibitions of the Continuità group which were presented by Guido Ballo, Giulio Carlo Argan, and Franco Russoli.
In 1958 a solo exhibition of his work was held at Galleria del Naviglio and presented by the architect Gio Ponti. The same year, he married Gigliola Gagnoni.
Upon the death of his mother, he moved to his studio in Via Orti 19, which he would share with his brother until 1964. He thus distanced himself from the group that had formed around the journal “Il Gesto” due to theoretical differences and a change in the direction of his work. Having exhausted his explorations of the automatic sign/mark, Giò delved into the problem of the rational organisation of marks and “making marks“ in the reverse with a series of reliefs which he would call Fluidità contrapposta (Contrasting Fluidity). One of these was exhibited at Documenta II in Kassel in 1959.
In the second half of 1958, Giò designed and created his first surfaces under tension, which he presented at Galerie Internationale d’Art Contemporain in Paris in 1959. At the first Biennale of Young Artists held in that same city in 1959, he exhibited a bronze tension and won the first prize for sculpture along with Anthony Caro. In 1961 he held another major solo exhibition at Galerie Internationale. Towards the end of that year, his son Bruto was born.
In 1962 Giò exhibited at Galleria Blu in Milan and at the Musée de l’Athénée in Geneva, and was invited to the 31st Venice Biennale with a solo room and a presentation in the catalogue by Guido Ballo. That same year he signed an exclusivity agreement with the Marlborough Gallery, which he would terminate in 1967.
In 1963 he exhibited at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels with a critical presentation by Giulio Carlo Argan.
In 1964 the Tate Gallery of London purchased the work One (1960), while at Documenta III in Kassel Giò exhibited a series of surfaces under tension. He also created two large works in the Folle (Mad) series, one of which would be purchased by the Gallery of Modern Art in Rome, and the other, the white marble Grande Ghibellina (Great Ghibelline Lady), went to the collection of Nelson Rockefeller. In 1965 he began the Radiali (Radials) and his first explorations of supporting structures, exhibiting at the Louisiana Museum in Copenhagen and at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in La Chaux-de-Fonds. He worked on the Quadrati (Squared) series until 1966, using strictly the size of two metres by two; these works were exhibited for the first time at the Kunst – und Museumsverein in Wuppertal. After two trips to the United States, where he stayed for a few months, Giò created Black Liberator (1966-67), a work dedicated to African-Americans. In 1967 he exhibited at the Marlborough Gallery in New York. That same year he signed an exclusivity agreement with the Martha Jackson Gallery in New York, where in 1971 he would exhibit his new works – from the Contatti (Contacts) to the Sole di Cerveteri, per Gastone Novelli (Sun of Cerveteri, for Gastone Novelli) – resulting from his in-depth investigation of the supporting structure and the field under tension. In 1968 he began working with Beatrice Monti and Galleria dell’Ariete in Milan, where he exhibited on several occasions. From 1970 on, Pomodoro created large-scale works in stone, marble, and bronze from his studio in Querceta, Versilia, at the foot of the Apuan Alps. In 1972 he began two new series: the Archi (Arches) and the Sole Produttore – Comune Raccolto (Producing Sun – Shared Harvest). In 1974 he exhibited stone works at Galleria del Naviglio in Milan with a critical presentation by Guido Ballo; that summer, his first retrospective was held at the Loggetta Lombardesca in Ravenna, featuring works from as early as 1958. Two years later, it would be followed by two more major solo exhibitions at the Castello dell’Imperatore in Prato city centre and at the Musée d’Ixelles in Brussels, which was presented by Jean Coquelet.
In 1976 Giò exhibited a series of Soli (Suns) at Galleria Stendhal in Milan with a review by Paolo Fossati.
In 1977 he collaborated with the residents of Ales, Sardinia, to create Piano d’uso collettivo (Collective Plane of Use), a large public work dedicated to Antonio Gramsci; he would exhibit its design materials and photographic documentation at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. That same year, he created the monumental work La Porta e il Sole (The Door and the Sun) for a private collector.
In 1978 Giò designed the set for the opera La Forza del Destino by Verdi, performed at the Verona Arena that summer. That same year he was invited to exhibit at the Venice Biennale with a solo room.
In 1979 he began designing the monumental work Teatro del Sole – 21 Giugno, Solstizio d’Estate (Theatre of the Sun – 21 June, Summer Solstice), a square/fountain dedicated to Goethe which had been commissioned by the city of Frankfurt (the work would be completed and unveiled in May of 1983).
From 1974 to 1980 Giò Pomodoro participated in a number of group shows both in Italy and abroad. In 1980, Giò exhibited one of his most significant works: Luogo di Misure (Place of Measurements) in Piazza dei Signori, Verona. The same year, after having designed the set for Mozart’s Magic Flute, held at at the Teatro La Fenice in Venice, he created the architectural group Ponte dei Martiri – Omaggio alla Resistenza (Bridge of Martyrs – Homage to the Resistance), in the square of the same name in Ravenna.
In 1981, Galleria Farsetti of Focette (Pietrasanta) devoted a solo exhibition to him that was presented by Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti.
In 1982 he began two more major works: the collective use sculpture Spirale ’82 (Spiral ’82) for Società Aeroportuale S.E.A., located opposite Malpensa airport in Milan, and Sole-Luna-Albero (Sun-Moon-Tree), a monumental group for Piazza Ramazzotti in Monza, completed in 1986. That same year, he took part in the exhibition Arte Italiana 1960-1982 at the Hayward Gallery in London.
In 1983, after moving to his new studio in Via San Marco 50 in Milan, Pomodoro exhibited with Dorazio and Nigro at Studio d’Arte Contemporanea Dabbeni in Lugano and then with Tilson and Ipoustéguy in Volterra as part of the exhibition Le materie dell’opera (The Materials of the Work), presented by Antonio Del Guercio.
In 1984 he was again invited to the 41st Venice Biennale with a solo room, and he participated in the exhibition The Language of Geometry at the Kunstmuseum Bern. The same year a large retrospective with works from 1954 to 1984 was organised by the city of Pisa in Palazzo Lanfranchi, followed by an exhibition on the mythological theme of Hermes at Galleria Stendhal in Milan.
In 1985 Studio d’Arte Contemporanea Dabbeni in Lugano held a solo exhibition of his work; at the same time, the city of Lugano publicly presented his series of sculptures devoted to Hermes for the first time – in their entirety – in its Palazzo Civico. The exhibition was a tribute to Giò Pomodoro by Károly Kerényi, the illustrious scholar of Greek myth and religion, who had lived for a long time in Ascona. Also in Lugano, his monumental sculpture Montefeltro – i passi e il volgersi (Montefeltro – Steps and Turns) was permanently installed at Villa La Favorita.
In June of 1986 Giò was invited to exhibit his works in Veksø at the exhibition Veksølund- Kopenaghen, presented by Jetta Sorensen.
In 1987 his exhibition on the theme of Soli (Suns) was held at the at the old Oratory of the Passion in the basilica of Sant’Ambrogio, Milan, in cooperation with the City of Milan, with a presentation by Luciano Caramel. That autumn, he opened a solo exhibition at Galleria l’Isola in Rome with a review by Giovanni Carandente. In December of the same year a retrospective of his work presented by Tommaso Trini was held in Palazzo dei Leoni, Messina.
In 1989 the City of Milan dedicated another major retrospective to him titled La scultura e il suo disegno, presented by Guido Ballo and held in the Rotonda della Besana. That summer, the large bronze sculpture Sole Aerospazio (Sun Aerospace) was unveiled in Piazza Adriano, Turin. It had been donated to the city by the Società Aeritalia for the twentieth anniversary of its founding and was presented in the catalogue with a review by Paolo Fossati.
In 1990 the exhibition Luoghi scolpiti fra Realtà e Utopia, curated by Caterina Zappia, was held in Villa Renatico Martini in Monsummano Terme.
In 1991 the Foundation Veranneman dedicated a major solo exhibition to Giò in Belgium; that summer, the monumental group Luogo dei Quattro Punti Cardinali (Place of the Four Cardinal Points) was unveiled; located in the public gardens in Taino opposite Lake Maggiore and Monte Rosa, the work was reviewed by Dario Micacchi.
In 1992 the Archaeological Museum of Milan with the cooperation of Johnson, the medal-making company, held a solo exhibition of medals which Giò had made starting in 1979; additionally, the funerary monument that he had dedicated to the tenor Mario Del Monaco was installed in Pesaro. That same year, Giò exhibited at the Galleria Ugolini in Rome and at the 18th Triennale di Milano; lastly, in November, the monumental stele Spirale per Galileo Galilei (Spiral for Galileo Galilei) was unveiled; made of bronze and granite, the work was set in the city centre of Padua, opposite the University. The sculpture was the result of a lengthy collaboration between Pomodoro and the university where Galileo held a teaching post from 1592 to 1610 and laid the foundations for the birth of modern science.
In 1993 the Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery in Tel Aviv hosted works by Giò in a major solo exhibition titled Giò Pomodoro – Sculptures & Drawings curated by Mordechai Omer. At the same time, he unveiled the work Solar Stairs – Homage to Kepler, which was purchased by a private donor and installed opposite the main entrance to the University of Tel Aviv.
In March of 1994 the marble model of the sculpture Sole Aerospazio (Sun Aerospace) was installed at the entrance to Turin’s Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea; Pomodoro donated the work to the Gallery. In concurrence with this event, the themed exhibition Tensioni 1958-1993 (Tensions, 1958-1993) opened at Galleria Berman in Turin and was presented by Angelo Dragone.
The same year, Pomodoro participated in the exhibition The Italian Metamorphosis, 1943-1968, held at the Guggenheim Museum of New York, and in the autumn he exhibited a selection of his works in the antique shops of Milan’s historic Sant’Ambrogio neighbourhood, an event presented by Alberto Fiz.
In 1995 Giò was invited to sit on the board of the International Sculpture Center (ISC) in Washington, D.C. After holding a solo exhibition presented by Giovanni Maria Accame in May at Galleria Spazia in Bologna, in the autumn of 1995 Giò Pomodoro was invited by the director of the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Peter Murray, to exhibit his works in that prestigious British exhibition park near Wakefield and later at the Accademia Italiana in London.
At the same time, the City of Venice collaborated with the Venice Biennale and the company Uno A Erre S.p.A. in Arezzo to organise a major retrospective exhibition titled Ornamenti (Ornaments) in the exhibition spaces of the Fondazione Querini Stampalia so as to document the sculptor’s extensive work in gold starting in 1954. During the following year, the exhibition would travel with Uno A Erre and the company Cesari & Rinaldi to Arezzo, Tokyo, and New York.
In 1996, a large retrospective was held in the Sala d’Arme at Palazzo Vecchio in Florence. Along with other bronze and marble works, the exhibition featured a large number of paintings on handmade paper of considerable size on a theme dear to Pomodoro: the sun. The same space also displayed the design and scale model for the monumental work Sole per Galileo Galilei (Sun for Galileo Galilei). During that summer, Pomodoro created a series of large granite and iron works in the San Piero quarry on the island of Elba; conceived using the ancient dry-stone technique, they were dedicated primarily to the island’s traditional activities.
In September of 1997, the large sculpture Sole per Galileo Galilei was unveiled in Piazza Poggi on Lungarno Serristori: the work, made of bronze and pietra serena, is approximately nine metres tall and was donated by Giò Pomodoro and Franca and Tullio Berrini to the city of Florence.
In the spring of 1998, works by Giò Pomodoro were exhibited in Padua’s Palazzo del Monte di Pietà, the headquarters of the Cassa di Risparmio di Padova e Rovigo bank, which sponsored the prestigious event. With sculptures and drawings by the master as well as photographs by Lorenzo Cappellini, the exhibition documented over forty years of investigation in sculpture and painting.
On the occasion, a large marble, Sole Caduto – a Galileo (Fallen Sun – For Galileo), was
displayed in Piazza del Duomo. That July, the Regional Authority of Valle d’Aosta and the St. Benin exhibition centre held Giò Pomodoro: pietre e marmi 1965-1997, presented by Antonio Del Guercio. In addition to the sculptures and large-scale paintings displayed in the Museum, the city of Aosta also hosted three monumental works by the sculptor in three open-air spaces.
During the autumn of 1998 the exhibition Giò Pomodoro – sculture e carte 1958/1998 opened in Galleria Fumagalli in Bergamo, a gallery with which he began actively collaborating; at the same time, the Egyptian Ministry of Culture invited Pomodoro as a guest of honour to the 7th International Cairo Biennial, where large paintings and sculptures of his were arranged in a solo room. In November, Gio’s work featured in the exhibition Studi per grandi opere 1954-1994 at the Galleria Berman in Turin.
In 1999, as part of the Arte Fiera in Bologna, large bronze sculptures were presented in a pavilion that Galleria Fumagalli dedicated to Pomodoro; that spring the Foundation Veranneman again hosted a large exhibition of works by Giò, where a selection of jewellery made by the sculptor was on display alongside large works on paper and sculptures. At the end of the exhibition, the Foundation Veranneman purchased the large Sole caduto – a Galileo in white Carrara marble for its sculpture park. In November he was invited as a Master Artist to hold a workshop at the Atlantic Center for the Arts in Smyrna Beach, Florida.
In April of 2000 Giò Pomodoro was awarded the Guglielmo Marconi International Prize for Sculpture; in May the Town of Laives and the Autonomous Province of Bolzano organised an exhibition of his works titled Sul sole e sul vuoto, curated by Pier Luigi Siena, with a review by Marisa Vescovo. They also purchased the large bronze Solar Stairs – Homage to Kepler currently installed opposite the school in Laives.
In June, he was invited by the Chancellor of the University of Urbino, Professor Carlo Bo, to the chancellor’s assembly hall for the presentation of a book edited by Giovanni Maria Accame, Giò Pomodoro: opere disegnate 1953-2000.
That July, a large exhibition of sculptures and drawings, Tensioni e Soli, was hosted in the Museo San Pietro in Colle di Val d’Elsa.
In December of 2000 Giò participated in the prestigious exhibition Novecento: Arte e Storia in Italia, curated by Maurizio Calvesi and Paul Ginsborg and organised by the City of Rome.
In February of 2001 the Italian Cultural Institute in Cologne dedicated a solo exhibition to Giò Pomodoro’s paintings. In October, on the occasion of the G8 summit and as part of the exhibition Artisti Italiani del XX secolo: dalla Farnesina alla Stazione Marittima, the monumental sculpture Sole – agli Italiani nel mondo (Sun – For the Italians in the World) was unveiled; it was donated to the city of Genoa and to its port by the company Grandi Navi Veloci. This was the last monumental work that the artist managed to see installed.
In April of 2002, the International Sculpture Center granted Giò the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award in Contemporary Sculpture: he was the first Italian artist to receive the award. To mark the occasion, Milan’s Galleria Giorgio Marconi dedicated a tribute to Gio’, arranging a solo exhibition of sculptures and large-scale watercolours. Lastly, in July, Giò took part in the fifth In Chartis Mevaniae exhibition organised by the Towns of Bevagna and Spoleto and curated by Giovanni Carandente.
Giò Pomodoro passed away in his studio in Milan on 21 December 2002.
In the years that followed, a number of public works which the sculptor had designed for the community were unveiled: on 1 March 2003, the large Vela (Sail) in memory of Carlo Bo was installed on the promenade of the historic centre of Sestri Levante; in June of 2004, Sole deposto (Deposed Sun) and the square dedicated to the artist, which he had designed in 1986, were presented in Orciano di Pesaro, his birthplace; and lastly, on 1 May 2005, the monumental sculpture Frammento di Vuoto (Fragment of the Void) was unveiled in the refurbished Piazza Roma in Carbonia..
Giò Pomodoro (1930-2002) was born on 17 November 1930 in Orciano di Pesaro, in the countryside of the Marche near Urbino.
In 1945 his family moved to Pesaro, where Giò attended the Technical Institute for Surveyors, earning his diploma in 1951. From 1952 to 1953 he performed his military service in Siena, Bologna, and Florence. In this last city he visited the museums daily and frequented the artistic milieu revolving around Galleria Numero, where he also exhibited his first “informel“ experimentations.
After the death of his father, Giò settled in Milan with his mother, his sister, and his brother, Arnaldo. The artistic and cultural scene in Milan which he frequented at the time was particularly active. After holding exhibitions with his brother at Galleria del Naviglio in Milan and Galleria Il Cavallino in Venice, which were directed by the brothers Carlo and Renato Cardazzo, Giò was invited to the 1956 Venice Biennale, where he exhibited a series of silver works cast over cuttlefish bones that he had dedicated to the poet Ezra Pound and begun creating in 1954.
The following year he collaborated actively with the journal “Il Gesto” and participated in the exhibition Arte Nucleare at Galleria San Fedele in Milan. Along with Dorazio, Novelli, Turcato, Tancredi, Perilli, Fontana, and his brother, Arnaldo, he would go on to organise the exhibitions of the Continuità group which were presented by Guido Ballo, Giulio Carlo Argan, and Franco Russoli.
In 1958 a solo exhibition of his work was held at Galleria del Naviglio and presented by the architect Gio Ponti. The same year, he married Gigliola Gagnoni.
Upon the death of his mother, he moved to his studio in Via Orti 19, which he would share with his brother until 1964. He thus distanced himself from the group that had formed around the journal “Il Gesto” due to theoretical differences and a change in the direction of his work. Having exhausted his explorations of the automatic sign/mark, Giò delved into the problem of the rational organisation of marks and “making marks“ in the reverse with a series of reliefs which he would call Fluidità contrapposta (Contrasting Fluidity). One of these was exhibited at Documenta II in Kassel in 1959.
In the second half of 1958, Giò designed and created his first surfaces under tension, which he presented at Galerie Internationale d’Art Contemporain in Paris in 1959. At the first Biennale of Young Artists held in that same city in 1959, he exhibited a bronze tension and won the first prize for sculpture along with Anthony Caro. In 1961 he held another major solo exhibition at Galerie Internationale. Towards the end of that year, his son Bruto was born.
In 1962 Giò exhibited at Galleria Blu in Milan and at the Musée de l’Athénée in Geneva, and was invited to the 31st Venice Biennale with a solo room and a presentation in the catalogue by Guido Ballo. That same year he signed an exclusivity agreement with the Marlborough Gallery, which he would terminate in 1967.
In 1963 he exhibited at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels with a critical presentation by Giulio Carlo Argan.
In 1964 the Tate Gallery of London purchased the work One (1960), while at Documenta III in Kassel Giò exhibited a series of surfaces under tension. He also created two large works in the Folle (Mad) series, one of which would be purchased by the Gallery of Modern Art in Rome, and the other, the white marble Grande Ghibellina (Great Ghibelline Lady), went to the collection of Nelson Rockefeller. In 1965 he began the Radiali (Radials) and his first explorations of supporting structures, exhibiting at the Louisiana Museum in Copenhagen and at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in La Chaux-de-Fonds. He worked on the Quadrati (Squared) series until 1966, using strictly the size of two metres by two; these works were exhibited for the first time at the Kunst – und Museumsverein in Wuppertal. After two trips to the United States, where he stayed for a few months, Giò created Black Liberator (1966-67), a work dedicated to African-Americans. In 1967 he exhibited at the Marlborough Gallery in New York. That same year he signed an exclusivity agreement with the Martha Jackson Gallery in New York, where in 1971 he would exhibit his new works – from the Contatti (Contacts) to the Sole di Cerveteri, per Gastone Novelli (Sun of Cerveteri, for Gastone Novelli) – resulting from his in-depth investigation of the supporting structure and the field under tension. In 1968 he began working with Beatrice Monti and Galleria dell’Ariete in Milan, where he exhibited on several occasions. From 1970 on, Pomodoro created large-scale works in stone, marble, and bronze from his studio in Querceta, Versilia, at the foot of the Apuan Alps. In 1972 he began two new series: the Archi (Arches) and the Sole Produttore – Comune Raccolto (Producing Sun – Shared Harvest). In 1974 he exhibited stone works at Galleria del Naviglio in Milan with a critical presentation by Guido Ballo; that summer, his first retrospective was held at the Loggetta Lombardesca in Ravenna, featuring works from as early as 1958. Two years later, it would be followed by two more major solo exhibitions at the Castello dell’Imperatore in Prato city centre and at the Musée d’Ixelles in Brussels, which was presented by Jean Coquelet.
In 1976 Giò exhibited a series of Soli (Suns) at Galleria Stendhal in Milan with a review by Paolo Fossati.
In 1977 he collaborated with the residents of Ales, Sardinia, to create Piano d’uso collettivo (Collective Plane of Use), a large public work dedicated to Antonio Gramsci; he would exhibit its design materials and photographic documentation at Ca’ Pesaro in Venice. That same year, he created the monumental work La Porta e il Sole (The Door and the Sun) for a private collector.
In 1978 Giò designed the set for the opera La Forza del Destino by Verdi, performed at the Verona Arena that summer. That same year he was invited to exhibit at the Venice Biennale with a solo room.
In 1979 he began designing the monumental work Teatro del Sole – 21 Giugno, Solstizio d’Estate (Theatre of the Sun – 21 June, Summer Solstice), a square/fountain dedicated to Goethe which had been commissioned by the city of Frankfurt (the work would be completed and unveiled in May of 1983).
From 1974 to 1980 Giò Pomodoro participated in a number of group shows both in Italy and abroad. In 1980, Giò exhibited one of his most significant works: Luogo di Misure (Place of Measurements) in Piazza dei Signori, Verona. The same year, after having designed the set for Mozart’s Magic Flute, held at at the Teatro La Fenice in Venice, he created the architectural group Ponte dei Martiri – Omaggio alla Resistenza (Bridge of Martyrs – Homage to the Resistance), in the square of the same name in Ravenna.
In 1981, Galleria Farsetti of Focette (Pietrasanta) devoted a solo exhibition to him that was presented by Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti.
In 1982 he began two more major works: the collective use sculpture Spirale ’82 (Spiral ’82) for Società Aeroportuale S.E.A., located opposite Malpensa airport in Milan, and Sole-Luna-Albero (Sun-Moon-Tree), a monumental group for Piazza Ramazzotti in Monza, completed in 1986. That same year, he took part in the exhibition Arte Italiana 1960-1982 at the Hayward Gallery in London.
In 1983, after moving to his new studio in Via San Marco 50 in Milan, Pomodoro exhibited with Dorazio and Nigro at Studio d’Arte Contemporanea Dabbeni in Lugano and then with Tilson and Ipoustéguy in Volterra as part of the exhibition Le materie dell’opera (The Materials of the Work), presented by Antonio Del Guercio.
In 1984 he was again invited to the 41st Venice Biennale with a solo room, and he participated in the exhibition The Language of Geometry at the Kunstmuseum Bern. The same year a large retrospective with works from 1954 to 1984 was organised by the city of Pisa in Palazzo Lanfranchi, followed by an exhibition on the mythological theme of Hermes at Galleria Stendhal in Milan.
In 1985 Studio d’Arte Contemporanea Dabbeni in Lugano held a solo exhibition of his work; at the same time, the city of Lugano publicly presented his series of sculptures devoted to Hermes for the first time – in their entirety – in its Palazzo Civico. The exhibition was a tribute to Giò Pomodoro by Károly Kerényi, the illustrious scholar of Greek myth and religion, who had lived for a long time in Ascona. Also in Lugano, his monumental sculpture Montefeltro – i passi e il volgersi (Montefeltro – Steps and Turns) was permanently installed at Villa La Favorita.
In June of 1986 Giò was invited to exhibit his works in Veksø at the exhibition Veksølund- Kopenaghen, presented by Jetta Sorensen.
In 1987 his exhibition on the theme of Soli (Suns) was held at the at the old Oratory of the Passion in the basilica of Sant’Ambrogio, Milan, in cooperation with the City of Milan, with a presentation by Luciano Caramel. That autumn, he opened a solo exhibition at Galleria l’Isola in Rome with a review by Giovanni Carandente. In December of the same year a retrospective of his work presented by Tommaso Trini was held in Palazzo dei Leoni, Messina.
In 1989 the City of Milan dedicated another major retrospective to him titled La scultura e il suo disegno, presented by Guido Ballo and held in the Rotonda della Besana. That summer, the large bronze sculpture Sole Aerospazio (Sun Aerospace) was unveiled in Piazza Adriano, Turin. It had been donated to the city by the Società Aeritalia for the twentieth anniversary of its founding and was presented in the catalogue with a review by Paolo Fossati.
In 1990 the exhibition Luoghi scolpiti fra Realtà e Utopia, curated by Caterina Zappia, was held in Villa Renatico Martini in Monsummano Terme.
In 1991 the Foundation Veranneman dedicated a major solo exhibition to Giò in Belgium; that summer, the monumental group Luogo dei Quattro Punti Cardinali (Place of the Four Cardinal Points) was unveiled; located in the public gardens in Taino opposite Lake Maggiore and Monte Rosa, the work was reviewed by Dario Micacchi.
In 1992 the Archaeological Museum of Milan with the cooperation of Johnson, the medal-making company, held a solo exhibition of medals which Giò had made starting in 1979; additionally, the funerary monument that he had dedicated to the tenor Mario Del Monaco was installed in Pesaro. That same year, Giò exhibited at the Galleria Ugolini in Rome and at the 18th Triennale di Milano; lastly, in November, the monumental stele Spirale per Galileo Galilei (Spiral for Galileo Galilei) was unveiled; made of bronze and granite, the work was set in the city centre of Padua, opposite the University. The sculpture was the result of a lengthy collaboration between Pomodoro and the university where Galileo held a teaching post from 1592 to 1610 and laid the foundations for the birth of modern science.
In 1993 the Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery in Tel Aviv hosted works by Giò in a major solo exhibition titled Giò Pomodoro – Sculptures & Drawings curated by Mordechai Omer. At the same time, he unveiled the work Solar Stairs – Homage to Kepler, which was purchased by a private donor and installed opposite the main entrance to the University of Tel Aviv.
In March of 1994 the marble model of the sculpture Sole Aerospazio (Sun Aerospace) was installed at the entrance to Turin’s Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea; Pomodoro donated the work to the Gallery. In concurrence with this event, the themed exhibition Tensioni 1958-1993 (Tensions, 1958-1993) opened at Galleria Berman in Turin and was presented by Angelo Dragone.
The same year, Pomodoro participated in the exhibition The Italian Metamorphosis, 1943-1968, held at the Guggenheim Museum of New York, and in the autumn he exhibited a selection of his works in the antique shops of Milan’s historic Sant’Ambrogio neighbourhood, an event presented by Alberto Fiz.
In 1995 Giò was invited to sit on the board of the International Sculpture Center (ISC) in Washington, D.C. After holding a solo exhibition presented by Giovanni Maria Accame in May at Galleria Spazia in Bologna, in the autumn of 1995 Giò Pomodoro was invited by the director of the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Peter Murray, to exhibit his works in that prestigious British exhibition park near Wakefield and later at the Accademia Italiana in London.
At the same time, the City of Venice collaborated with the Venice Biennale and the company Uno A Erre S.p.A. in Arezzo to organise a major retrospective exhibition titled Ornamenti (Ornaments) in the exhibition spaces of the Fondazione Querini Stampalia so as to document the sculptor’s extensive work in gold starting in 1954. During the following year, the exhibition would travel with Uno A Erre and the company Cesari & Rinaldi to Arezzo, Tokyo, and New York.
In 1996, a large retrospective was held in the Sala d’Arme at Palazzo Vecchio in Florence. Along with other bronze and marble works, the exhibition featured a large number of paintings on handmade paper of considerable size on a theme dear to Pomodoro: the sun. The same space also displayed the design and scale model for the monumental work Sole per Galileo Galilei (Sun for Galileo Galilei). During that summer, Pomodoro created a series of large granite and iron works in the San Piero quarry on the island of Elba; conceived using the ancient dry-stone technique, they were dedicated primarily to the island’s traditional activities.
In September of 1997, the large sculpture Sole per Galileo Galilei was unveiled in Piazza Poggi on Lungarno Serristori: the work, made of bronze and pietra serena, is approximately nine metres tall and was donated by Giò Pomodoro and Franca and Tullio Berrini to the city of Florence.
In the spring of 1998, works by Giò Pomodoro were exhibited in Padua’s Palazzo del Monte di Pietà, the headquarters of the Cassa di Risparmio di Padova e Rovigo bank, which sponsored the prestigious event. With sculptures and drawings by the master as well as photographs by Lorenzo Cappellini, the exhibition documented over forty years of investigation in sculpture and painting.
On the occasion, a large marble, Sole Caduto – a Galileo (Fallen Sun – For Galileo), was
displayed in Piazza del Duomo. That July, the Regional Authority of Valle d’Aosta and the St. Benin exhibition centre held Giò Pomodoro: pietre e marmi 1965-1997, presented by Antonio Del Guercio. In addition to the sculptures and large-scale paintings displayed in the Museum, the city of Aosta also hosted three monumental works by the sculptor in three open-air spaces.
During the autumn of 1998 the exhibition Giò Pomodoro – sculture e carte 1958/1998 opened in Galleria Fumagalli in Bergamo, a gallery with which he began actively collaborating; at the same time, the Egyptian Ministry of Culture invited Pomodoro as a guest of honour to the 7th International Cairo Biennial, where large paintings and sculptures of his were arranged in a solo room. In November, Gio’s work featured in the exhibition Studi per grandi opere 1954-1994 at the Galleria Berman in Turin.
In 1999, as part of the Arte Fiera in Bologna, large bronze sculptures were presented in a pavilion that Galleria Fumagalli dedicated to Pomodoro; that spring the Foundation Veranneman again hosted a large exhibition of works by Giò, where a selection of jewellery made by the sculptor was on display alongside large works on paper and sculptures. At the end of the exhibition, the Foundation Veranneman purchased the large Sole caduto – a Galileo in white Carrara marble for its sculpture park. In November he was invited as a Master Artist to hold a workshop at the Atlantic Center for the Arts in Smyrna Beach, Florida.
In April of 2000 Giò Pomodoro was awarded the Guglielmo Marconi International Prize for Sculpture; in May the Town of Laives and the Autonomous Province of Bolzano organised an exhibition of his works titled Sul sole e sul vuoto, curated by Pier Luigi Siena, with a review by Marisa Vescovo. They also purchased the large bronze Solar Stairs – Homage to Kepler currently installed opposite the school in Laives.
In June, he was invited by the Chancellor of the University of Urbino, Professor Carlo Bo, to the chancellor’s assembly hall for the presentation of a book edited by Giovanni Maria Accame, Giò Pomodoro: opere disegnate 1953-2000.
That July, a large exhibition of sculptures and drawings, Tensioni e Soli, was hosted in the Museo San Pietro in Colle di Val d’Elsa.
In December of 2000 Giò participated in the prestigious exhibition Novecento: Arte e Storia in Italia, curated by Maurizio Calvesi and Paul Ginsborg and organised by the City of Rome.
In February of 2001 the Italian Cultural Institute in Cologne dedicated a solo exhibition to Giò Pomodoro’s paintings. In October, on the occasion of the G8 summit and as part of the exhibition Artisti Italiani del XX secolo: dalla Farnesina alla Stazione Marittima, the monumental sculpture Sole – agli Italiani nel mondo (Sun – For the Italians in the World) was unveiled; it was donated to the city of Genoa and to its port by the company Grandi Navi Veloci. This was the last monumental work that the artist managed to see installed.
In April of 2002, the International Sculpture Center granted Giò the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award in Contemporary Sculpture: he was the first Italian artist to receive the award. To mark the occasion, Milan’s Galleria Giorgio Marconi dedicated a tribute to Gio’, arranging a solo exhibition of sculptures and large-scale watercolours. Lastly, in July, Giò took part in the fifth In Chartis Mevaniae exhibition organised by the Towns of Bevagna and Spoleto and curated by Giovanni Carandente.
Giò Pomodoro passed away in his studio in Milan on 21 December 2002.
In the years that followed, a number of public works which the sculptor had designed for the community were unveiled: on 1 March 2003, the large Vela (Sail) in memory of Carlo Bo was installed on the promenade of the historic centre of Sestri Levante; in June of 2004, Sole deposto (Deposed Sun) and the square dedicated to the artist, which he had designed in 1986, were presented in Orciano di Pesaro, his birthplace; and lastly, on 1 May 2005, the monumental sculpture Frammento di Vuoto (Fragment of the Void) was unveiled in the refurbished Piazza Roma in Carbonia..
Joshua Hagler (1979, Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho, United States) lives and works in Roswell, New Mexico, where he moved in 2018 as a grant recipient of the Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program. He graduated from the University of Arizona in Tucson with a degree in visual communications. Self-directed research and travel inspire the artist career determining how he integrates creative influences with life experience. He explores subjects including his middle American upbringing, the 19th-century exploration of North America, modern science fiction, and the traditions of Italian religious art. Hagler confronts ideas of extreme religious experience and notions of wider cultural and social identities. He conceives large-format canvases with scenes often distorted by gestural smears of fluid brushwork that enter into realms of abstraction. His paintings, sculptures, videos, and animations have been exhibited internationally: “The Living Circle Us”, curated by David Anfam, Unit London, London, 2021; “Drawing in the Dark”, Cris Worley Fine Arts, Dallas, 2021; “Love Letters to the Poorly Regarded”, Roswell Museum and Art Center, Roswell, 2018; “The River Lethe”, Brand Library & Art Center, Los Angeles, 2018, “With Liberty and Justice for Some”, Children’s Museum of the Arts, New York, 2018; “Dreams and Fevers”, Torrance Art Museum, Los Angeles, 2018, among others. In 2021, he released his first monograph entitled “This is the Picture”. Furthermore, he is also an author of poems and essays.
Joshua Hagler (1979, Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho, United States) lives and works in Roswell, New Mexico, where he moved in 2018 as a grant recipient of the Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program. He graduated from the University of Arizona in Tucson with a degree in visual communications. Self-directed research and travel inspire the artist career determining how he integrates creative influences with life experience. He explores subjects including his middle American upbringing, the 19th-century exploration of North America, modern science fiction, and the traditions of Italian religious art. Hagler confronts ideas of extreme religious experience and notions of wider cultural and social identities. He conceives large-format canvases with scenes often distorted by gestural smears of fluid brushwork that enter into realms of abstraction. His paintings, sculptures, videos, and animations have been exhibited internationally: “The Living Circle Us”, curated by David Anfam, Unit London, London, 2021; “Drawing in the Dark”, Cris Worley Fine Arts, Dallas, 2021; “Love Letters to the Poorly Regarded”, Roswell Museum and Art Center, Roswell, 2018; “The River Lethe”, Brand Library & Art Center, Los Angeles, 2018, “With Liberty and Justice for Some”, Children’s Museum of the Arts, New York, 2018; “Dreams and Fevers”, Torrance Art Museum, Los Angeles, 2018, among others. In 2021, he released his first monograph entitled “This is the Picture”. Furthermore, he is also an author of poems and essays.
Radu Oreian was born in 1984 in Tarnaveni, Romania. He currently works and lives in France. He awarded his first degree in 2005 at the University of Art and Design of Cluj-Napoca and he continued his studies at National University of Art of Bucharest where he graduated in 2007. Radu Oreian’s practice has at its core the classical mediums of drawing and painting and explores the way history, ancient myths and archives shape our society and our understanding of humanity. His ‘Molecular Painting’ are a miniature-like format of works that pulsate with details and thus intend to draw the viewer’s eye deeper and deeper into the fabric of the paint and hopefully deeper and deeper into the nature and meaning of painting. The red thread that runs through Radu Oreian’s works is creating a new, meditative visual imprint of a peculiar density that appears to exist in a pulsing state of tension and relaxation. Radu Oreian has been the protagonist of several solo-shows: SVIT Gallery, Befriending the memory muscle (Prague, 2020, with Ciprian Mureşan), Gallery Nosco, Microsripts and Melted Matters (London, 2019), Gallery ISA, Farewell To The Thinker of Thoughts (Mumbai, 2018). Among his institutional projects: La Fondazione, Project Room (Roma, 2020, solo-show), The Last Agora, Plan B Foundation (Cluj-Napoca, 2019) and Chasseur d’Images, Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature (Paris, 2019). Among his group shows: One in a million, Gallery Nosco (Marseille, 2018) and On The Sex of Angels, Nicodim Gallery (Bucarest, 2017).
Radu Oreian was born in 1984 in Tarnaveni, Romania. He currently works and lives in France. He awarded his first degree in 2005 at the University of Art and Design of Cluj-Napoca and he continued his studies at National University of Art of Bucharest where he graduated in 2007. Radu Oreian’s practice has at its core the classical mediums of drawing and painting and explores the way history, ancient myths and archives shape our society and our understanding of humanity. His ‘Molecular Painting’ are a miniature-like format of works that pulsate with details and thus intend to draw the viewer’s eye deeper and deeper into the fabric of the paint and hopefully deeper and deeper into the nature and meaning of painting. The red thread that runs through Radu Oreian’s works is creating a new, meditative visual imprint of a peculiar density that appears to exist in a pulsing state of tension and relaxation. Radu Oreian has been the protagonist of several solo-shows: SVIT Gallery, Befriending the memory muscle (Prague, 2020, with Ciprian Mureşan), Gallery Nosco, Microsripts and Melted Matters (London, 2019), Gallery ISA, Farewell To The Thinker of Thoughts (Mumbai, 2018). Among his institutional projects: La Fondazione, Project Room (Roma, 2020, solo-show), The Last Agora, Plan B Foundation (Cluj-Napoca, 2019) and Chasseur d’Images, Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature (Paris, 2019). Among his group shows: One in a million, Gallery Nosco (Marseille, 2018) and On The Sex of Angels, Nicodim Gallery (Bucarest, 2017).
Born in 1982 in Tunis, Thameur Mejri trained as a painter at the Institute of Fine Arts in Tunis and now lives and works in Nabeul, Tunisia.
Thameur Mejri investigates complexities of human existence by identifying parallels between paradoxical ideas of violence, innocence, guilt and shame. The human figure acts as a central element throughout his compositions, the vigorous manner in which Mejri places the figure onto the canvas, reflects the relationship between painting and painter, suggesting self-portraits that battle to fully emerge and reveal themselves. There is an interplay between painting and film. He approaches painting as a film director and he films with the vision of a painter, allowing for the qualities of each discipline to manifest upon one another; the chaos and movement in his paintings are a testament of this. The energetic application of colour establishes the atmosphere in this confrontation between heaven and hell, each represented by blue and red. In choosing these colours as a departure point and importantly for their opposing religious connotations of heaven and hell, he confirms the major influence of these symbols, particularly in the Muslim world.
He graduated from the Institute of Fine Arts in Tunis, He has exhibited widely, including the 13th Cairo Biennial, Cairo, Egypt / Dakar Biennale of Contemporary African Art, Dakar, Senegal / N’ Namdi Center for Contemporary Art, Detroit, USA / New York International Independent Film and Video Festival, New York, USA / solo exhibition at le MAC Lyon / France. Mejri’s work forms part of many prestigious collections of art, including Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE / The Sindika Dokolo Foundation, Luanda, Angola / Dalloul Art Foundation, Beirut, Lebanon. The Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden (MACAAL). Marrakech. Morocco.
Born in 1982 in Tunis, Thameur Mejri trained as a painter at the Institute of Fine Arts in Tunis and now lives and works in Nabeul, Tunisia.
Thameur Mejri investigates complexities of human existence by identifying parallels between paradoxical ideas of violence, innocence, guilt and shame. The human figure acts as a central element throughout his compositions, the vigorous manner in which Mejri places the figure onto the canvas, reflects the relationship between painting and painter, suggesting self-portraits that battle to fully emerge and reveal themselves. There is an interplay between painting and film. He approaches painting as a film director and he films with the vision of a painter, allowing for the qualities of each discipline to manifest upon one another; the chaos and movement in his paintings are a testament of this. The energetic application of colour establishes the atmosphere in this confrontation between heaven and hell, each represented by blue and red. In choosing these colours as a departure point and importantly for their opposing religious connotations of heaven and hell, he confirms the major influence of these symbols, particularly in the Muslim world.
He graduated from the Institute of Fine Arts in Tunis, He has exhibited widely, including the 13th Cairo Biennial, Cairo, Egypt / Dakar Biennale of Contemporary African Art, Dakar, Senegal / N’ Namdi Center for Contemporary Art, Detroit, USA / New York International Independent Film and Video Festival, New York, USA / solo exhibition at le MAC Lyon / France. Mejri’s work forms part of many prestigious collections of art, including Barjeel Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE / The Sindika Dokolo Foundation, Luanda, Angola / Dalloul Art Foundation, Beirut, Lebanon. The Museum of African Contemporary Art Al Maaden (MACAAL). Marrakech. Morocco.
- Thameur Mejri
- Michael Staniak