Italy in SongEun : We Have Never Been Modern
Curated by Maria Rosa Sossai Artistic Director of AlbumArte, Rome and Angelo Gioè Director of Italian Institute of Culture in Seoul
Exhibition Period Thursday, May 8th – Saturday, August 9th, 2014
Press Conference Thursday, May 8th, 2014 at 11:30am, SongEun ArtSpace
Opening Thursday, May 8th, 2014 at 6:00-8:00pm, SongEun ArtSpace
Artists Talk + Performance Thursday, May 8th, 2014 at 4:00-6:00pm, S.Atrium SongEun ArtSpace)
Artists Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Meris Angioletti, Francesco Arena, Elisabetta Benassi, Rossella Biscotti, Tomaso De Luca, Ettore Favini, Chiara Fumai, Piero Golia, Francesca Grilli, Adelita Husni-Bey, , Margherita Moscardini,Valerio Rocco Orlando, Adrian Paci, Giulia Piscitelli, Paola Pivi, Moira Ricci, Marinella Senatore, Alberto Tadiello, Diego Tonus, Luca Trevisani, Nico Vascellari
Exhibition Hours Monday – Saturday 11:00-19:00, Closed Sundays / Free
Venue SongEun ArtSpace (Apgujung-Ro 75 Gil 6, Gangnam-Gu, Seoul)
Exhibits 24 works including sculptures, drawings, photos, installations and video works
Organized by SongEun Art and Cultural Foundation, Italian Institute of Culture in Seoul
Supported by Embassy of Italy in South Korea, Italian Institute of Culture in Seoul
Exhibition Overview
In May 2014, SongEun ArtSpace will present its third special annual project, titled Italy in SongEun : We Have Never Been Modern featuring promising Italian young artists who are showing for the first time in Korea.
The exhibition We Have Never Been Modern aims at questioning the disappearance of guarantees and foundations for the future. We are left with the gaping ideological void of a modernity that has failed, or indeed perhaps never existed, and the impression of having been divided, segmented and trained. Rethinking the mechanisms of construction of the work of art, this exhibition tries to question where we can situate the artistic production of today and of Italy in particular and what the answer is.
The works of twenty-two Italian artists of the younger generations featured in the exhibition are indicative of the way in which Italy’s artistic life has addressed facts and values over the last few decades, calling into question the power that determined them and the discourse that transmitted them.
Italy in SongEun : We Have Never Been Modern
The exhibition takes its title from an essay by Bruno Latour in which the French anthropologist of science reflects on the idea of modernity seen as progress advancing rationally and evenly throughout all corners of the earth. At the core of his critical thinking are the paramount issues concerning those Western societies who have imposed their own modern mind-sets on individual local cultures. What does it mean, today, to be modern? Being modern no longer means riding on that time arrow that drew a clear line between the past and the future. On the contrary, more and more art evades the modernist requirement and aspires to a timeless condition while, at the same time, addressing present-related issues or engaging with the more recent history and localized situations that then become the starting point for a range of subjective but nonetheless universal explorations. These are the questions at the core of the project. The twenty-two Italian artists selected for the show were born in the years from 1965 to the mid ’80s and are grouped according to a sensibility that is shared across the generations and to lines of research that appear in the various artistic paths. The aim is that of showing, although not exhaustively, the aesthetic and expressive changes experimented by the latest generation of Italian artists. What emerges is an artistic production in line with other contexts such as: architecture, media, literature, philosophy, anthropology, social sciences and with areas adjoining the field of the visual arts.
The exhibition will be part of the Italian Cultural Institute in Seoul program to promote Italian contemporary art.
‘We Have Never Been Modern’ is a process of analysis and mapping of the Italian art scene through five separate sections, each one addressing an aspect of the artistic take on a certain idea of modernity.
Uninventing modernity – Francesco Arena, Elisabetta Benassi, Rossella Biscotti, Valerio Rocco Orlando, Alberto Tadiello consider the phenomenon of hybridization which has given rise – in the last two decades – to a multifaceted and heterogeneous artistic process that draws equally from the past and the present, for both contents and means of expression.
Plurality of worlds – Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Piero Golia, Giulia Piscitelli, Paola Pivi, Luca Trevisani belong to the era of globalization and diaspora, where it is not important to belong to a territorial geography, but rather to be tuned to a conceptual nomadism that can reflect, on every occasion, our existential and creative processes.
Parallel cosmograms – Meris Angioletti, Tomaso De Luca, Chiara Fumai, Nico Vascellari go to the heart of the principles that define the most essential truths and the quality of the present time.
Policies of nature – Ettore Favini, Margherita Moscardini, Adrian Paci, Moira Ricci are aware of the disappearance of movements and currents; perhaps such orphanage is why artists often cultivate the cult of memory and use expressive forms.
Thinking about the present – Francesca Grilli, Adelita Husni-Bey, Marinella Senatore, Diego Tonus’s videos are more like containers of time that is eternally present.
All the artists invited to the show, together with the curators, know that we do not control what we produce, so the sphere of our certainties will be smaller than that of our actions. In any case experts are as blind as we are.
Curators Angelo Gioè and Maria Rosa Sossai
Angelo Gioè is Director of the Italian Cultural Institute in Seoul. He serves for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Italy and previously has been posted to Cairo, Tel Aviv and Sydney as Cultural Attaché. During his last year in Rome (2012) he was Head of Section of the “Farnesina Art Collection”.
He received his M.A. in Classic Philology (main subjects: Greek, Latin, and Sanskrit Aesthetics and Art) from La Sapienza University in Rome; his post Lauream Specialization in Greek Paleography from The Vatican Library (BAV- 2 years); his second M.A as Curator for Contemporary Art and Architecture from La Sapienza University in Rome; and his PhD in Ancient Greek Language from La Sorbonne University in Paris.
He was Professor of Latin and Ancient Greek at the Liceo Martino Filetico in Ferentino (Italy) and held the chair of Ancient Greek Language and Literature, and Grammar and Linguistics at the Matela Bela University in Slovakia. He organized several exhibitions internationally. The most recent, Sounds and Visions, was held at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art in 2009. He continues to write articles in the areas of philology, literature, translation studies, and art.
Maria Rosa Sossai is a curator and researcher in the field of artistic practices and educational policies. She lives in Rome, Italy. In December 2013 she was appointed artistic director of AlbumArte, space | projects for contemporary art, Rome. She is also one of the founders of ALA Accademia Libera delle Arti, an independent platform for education and contemporary art that conceives the artistic practice as a process of shared knowledge; As an independent curator she worked on projects and exhibitions for commercial galleries, art foundations and museums both in Italy and abroad; among them MAN Museum in Nuoro, Real Academia de España, the American Academy, Fondazione Pastificio Cerere, AlbumArte and Nomas Foundation in Rome, Institute of Italian Culture in Istanbul, the Tel Aviv Museum.
She is a contributor to Flash Art, Arte e Critica, Artribune and Shifter; and her publications include Arte video, Storie e culture del video d’artista in Italia (Video Art, History and Culture of Video Art in Italy), 2002, and Film d’artista, Percorsi e confronti tra arte e cinema (Artists’ Films, Writings on Art and Cinema), 2009, both published by Silvana Editoriale, Milan.
About SongEun ArtSpace
SongEun Art Space is a non-profit, non-commercial art space founded by the SongEun Art and Cultural Foundation in November 2010. The main purpose of the space is to support and promote promising young Korean and acclaimed international artists. As the only private art space in Seoul that is open free to the public, the SongEun Art and Cultural Foundation aims to contribute positively to the community through its unique and innovative exhibitions and projects.
SongEun Art and Cultural Foundation
SongEun ArtSpace Apgujeong-Ro 75 Gil 6, Gangnam-Gu, Seoul 135-955 www.songeunartspace.org
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Laurence Geoffrey’s, Ltd. 64-4, Bukchon-ro, Jongno-Gu, Seoul 110-260 www.artconsulting.com
Press Contact : Mi-Ri Noh E mirinoh95@gmail.com T 82-2-745-1149 F 82-2-745-1148 M 82-10-2698-7411
Webhard webhard.net ID: songeunart / PW : 1111 Folder: Italy in SongEun
Work List
Giorgio Andreotta Calò (1979-)
Scolpire il tempo (Sculpting time), 2010 Installation view from Extralarge, MACRO, Rome, 2013 Installation of variable dimensions: three bronze sculptures with wax and water Raffaella and Stefano Sciarretta Collection, Nomas Foundation, Rome Courtesy the artist Photo Giorgio Benni |
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Meris Angioletti (1977-)
Golden, Brown and Blue, 2013 Slide projection. Six slide projections, coloured gels and text. Variable dimensions Courtesy the artist and SCHLEICHER/LANGE, Berlin |
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Francesco Arena (1978-)
3,24 mq, 2004 Installation view: Francesco Arena, Nomas Foundation, Rome, 2008 Wood, furniture 270 x 120 x 230 cm Raffaella and Stefano Sciarretta Collection, Nomas Foundation, Rome Courtesy the artist and Monitor, Rome Photo Francesco Cartocci |
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Elisabetta Benassi (1966-)
Son of Niobe, 2013 HD video transferred onto DVD, color, silent, approx. 2’ Courtesy the artist and Magazzino, Rome |
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Elisabetta Benassi (1966-) Per una lira io vendo tutti sogni miei, 2009 Coin (100 lira), Ø 2.2 cm Courtesy the artist and Magazzino, Rome |
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Rossella Biscotti (1978-)
Le teste in oggetto (The Heads in Question), 2009 Silver gelatin print on baryth paper 110 x 141 cm
Le teste in oggetto, particolari (The Heads in Question, details), 2009 Eight c-prints 39.5 x 27 cm each Raffaella and Stefano Sciarretta Collection, Nomas Foundation, Rome Courtesy the artist |
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Tomaso De Luca (1988-)
An Incomplete Portrait of Anchises and Love is Soft but Hard Sometimes, 2013 Video, color, sound; ink on paper, slide projection Variable dimensions Installation view at Van Horbourg, Zürich Courtesy the artist and Monitor, Rome |
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Ettore Favini (1974-)
Cantra, 2011-2013 Installation of variable dimensions (detail); iron, wool, wood Courtesy the artist and Aike Dellarco, Shanghai |
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Chiara Fumai (1978-) Still from the video-performance Chiara Fumai reads Valerie Solanas, 2013 Winner of Furla Art Award 2013 Courtesy the artist and A Palazzo Gallery, Brescia |
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Piero Golia (1974-) May Be Not Even a Nation of Millions…, 2004 Human skeleton, diamond, gold 28 x 172 x 100 cm Raffaella and Stefano Sciarretta Collection, Nomas Foundation, Rome Courtesy the artist |
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Francesca Grilli (1978-) 194.9 MHz, 2006 Video still Digital video, 5’22″ Courtesy the artist |
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Adelita Husni-Bey (1985-) Gestures of Labour, 2009 Video still Silent video, S8 transferred to DVD, 5’39” Courtesy the artist and Laveronica Arte Contemporanea, Modica |
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Margherita Moscardini (1981-) 1xUnknown, 2012-ongoing Partial view of the installation Mini-projectors, power packs, paper, paperboard, concrete, miniDV videos, sound, MDF Courtesy the artist and Ex Elettrofonica, Rome Photo Dario Lasagni |
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Valerio Rocco Orlando (1978-)
Personale è Politico (The Personal is Political), 2011 Green neon, 20 x 142 cm Raffaella and Stefano Sciarretta Collection, Nomas Foundation, Rome Courtesy the artist Photo Giorgio Benni |
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Adrian Paci (1969-) The Column, 2013 Video still Video, colour, sound, 25’40’’ Courtesy the artist, kaufmann repetto, Milan, and Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich |
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Giulia Piscitelli (1965-) Guerra/e Pace (War and Peace), 2013 1957 Italian edition of War and Peace by Lev Tolstoj, 26 x 6 x 18 cm Courtesy the artist and Galleria Fonti, Naples |
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Paola Pivi (1971-) |
INFO: www.songeunartspace.org