Checkmate. Games of International Art from the Sixties to Now

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THE CONCRETE CHECKMATE. UTOPIA GAMES OF INTERNATIONAL Ivan Tendencies ART Picelj FROMand THENew SIXTIES TO 1961 – 1973 NOW

Under the Patronage of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb (Muzej suvremene umjetnosti)

Curated by Ilaria Bignotti


Checkmate. Games of International Art from the Sixties to Now Curated by Ilaria Bignotti 21 September – 30 November 2016 Private view: Wednesday, 21 September, 6 – 8 pm Cortesi Gallery, 41 & 43 Maddox Street, London W1S 2PD Cortesi Gallery is delighted to present Checkmate. Games of International Art from the Sixties to Now, a group exhibition featuring works by Alberto Biasi, Alighiero Boetti, Agostino Bonalumi, Enrico Castellani, Tony Cragg, Piero Dorazio, Lucio Fontana, Tano Festa, Joseph Kosuth, Heinz Mack, Giulio Paolini, Jesús-Rafael Soto, Grazia Varisco. Checkmate proposes a critical journey to discover the capacity of art to confound viewers, both visually and conceptually. Not only can an artwork surprise with the provocation of its forms, but it also creates short-circuits among different elements, thus revealing further levels of interpretation that challenge ideas of space, time and language. The exhibition plays on multiple significances, starting from its title, which could refer to a checkered board, a grid that the artist uses to organise intuition within the parameters of language; or a chessboard, where strategies come together to confront viewers. Checkmate explores relationships between works from the 50s and the 70s, as well as more recent pieces. The narrative’s point of departure begins with a work realised by Giulio Paolini in 2007 (Zeusi e Parrasio) and another by Tony Cragg from 2007 (Points of View), installed along a diagonal that cuts through the gallery space. Both works question a mysterious element that often surrounds works of art, something that Paolini evokes when speaking about his lyric and metaphysic installation (of which another version can be found at Castello di Rivoli): “The author, a rival to himself, disappears in front of the work of art, as if left waiting for the image”. This “waiting for the image” is also apparent in Cragg’s sculpture, presented in open dialogue with Paolini’s work, where profiles merge and become lost in an alternation of volumes and voids.


In fact, ambiguity leads the game played in Checkmate: from Joseph Kosuth’s Art as Idea as Idea (1967) to Alighiero Boetti’s Uno, cento, mille (1979), where the alphabet has been crossed out with blue pen strokes and the only traces left are commas, which give space to the intuition of the untold. In direct dialogue with these two works is Heinz Mack’s metaphysic landscape Orizzonte+Piramide (1972), an aluminium board where a pyramid based on the horizon points to another, further away, in a conceptual game of references. The post-spatialist and kinetic works featured in the exhibition play with the senses in a similar way: Enrico Castellani’s Superficie (1987), an alternation of shadow and light; the extroflexed canvas by Agostino Bonalumi; the optical-dynamic Lamellar Reliefs of Alberto Biasi (1962– 1966); the reticular painting Piccola Premura (1962–1963) by Piero Dorazio, which brings up all the hues of orange and blue; and Jesús Rafael Soto’s Purpura y plata (1969), where a flat, solid red painted field is presented in stark contrast with a vibrating grid of aluminium. Finally, The reds and blues of the open curtain that reveals Tano Festa’s Particolare della finestra (Detail of Window) (1965) force one to look at the exhibition from a new perspective, inviting visitors to come up with their own rules for the game, map their own journey through the languages of the eye, freely put together and take apart their own aesthetic vision, giving them tools to describe and interpret the work of art. New discourses between emotion, relationships and gaze are created via the three Tavole Magnetiche by Grazia Varisco, created towards the end of the 50s and the start of the 60s. The exhibition and its accompanying catalogue invite the public to join in the game. Cortesi Gallery, London 41 & 43 Maddox Street, London W1S 2PD Opening times: Monday – Friday: 10 am – 6 pm; Saturday, 12 – 6 pm www.cortesigallery.com info@cortesigallery.com For further information please contact: Maria Cristina Giusti, Rhiannon Pickles PR, cristina@picklespr.com, +44(0)7925810607


Alberto Biasi Rilievo ottico dinamico , 1966 PVC and wood diagonal: 162.5 x 162.5 cm side: 114 x 114 cm


Alighiero Boetti UNO CENTO MILLE, 1979 blue ballpoint pen on paper laid on canvas (3 parts) 100 x 70 cm each


Agostino Bonalumi Bianco, 1967 shaped canvas and vinyl tempera 80 x 80 cm


Enrico Castellani Superficie Bianca, 1987 acrylic on shaped canvas 119 x 98 cm


Tony Cragg Points of view, 2007 lacquered bronze 107 Ă— 65 x 65 cm Base is part of the original artwork Ed. 6


Piero Dorazio Piccola premura, 1962 oil on canvas 72 x 54 cm


Lucio Fontana Untitled, 1953 glazed ceramic 29 Ă— 18 cm


Joseph Kosuth Titled (Art As Idea As Idea) [present] Eng - Fr., 1967 printed dictionary definitions glued to boards, pencil (three cardboards) form of presentation: photographic process, photograph mounted on sintra (three panels) 122 Ă— 122 cm each


Heinz Mack Pyramide + Horizont, 1972 aluminium on wood, pexiglass, handembossed, on fibreboard. In metal frame 100 Ă— 130 Ă— 5 cm


Giulio Paolini Zeusi e Parrasio, 2007 eight plaster elements 46 cm each, two bases 135 x 50 x 50 cm each, two cases 50 x 50 cm each, two canvases 150 x 150 cm


Tano Festa Particolare della finestra, 1965 enamel and mixed media on canvas 100 Ă— 81 cm


Jesús Rafael Soto Pùrpura Y Plata, 1969 acrylic on aluminum and wood 151 × 101.6 cm


Grazia Varisco Tavola magnetica a elementi componibili (4 neri + 3 bianchi), 1959 metal board with mobile and modular elements (4 black and 4 white) 37 x 33 cm


Grazia Varisco Tavola magnetica, 1960 metal board with mobile elements 66 x 17 cm


Grazia Verisco Tavola magnetica, 1962/1963 metal board with mobile elements 42 x 30 cm



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