Pier Paolo Calzolari “And I Say”

Marianne Boesky Gallery 24th Street

poster for Pier Paolo Calzolari “And I Say”
[Image: Pier Paolo Calzolari “Untitled" (2015) Lead, dyes, paper. 73 1/4 x 99 5/8 x 3 1/8 in. © Pier Paolo Calzolari. Photo credit: Paolo Semprucci]

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MARIANNE BOESKY GALLERY presents our third solo exhibition of Italian artist Pier Paolo Calzolari, debuting works completed in the last two years. AND I SAY further develops the artist’s decades-long practice of using commonplace and organic materials, including salt, lead, oyster shells, tobacco, and fire, as a means of exploring states of matter, transience, light, and beauty. The exhibition will feature two separate immersive installations along with a series of lead wall works. AND I SAY is the second single-artist exhibition to be presented across the gallery’s adjacent spaces at 507 and 509 W. 24th Street.

Through his deliberate dialogue with art history, Calzolari has distinguished himself from his Arte Povera peers, who frequently embraced an avant-garde rejection of the cultural past. AND I SAY reflects this continued engagement, drawing on traditions cited by the artist as ranging from primitive African graffiti to Cretan and Pompeiian painting, Japanese decorative arts, and elements of Mannerism and the Baroque. Through his comprehensive repositioning of art historical sources, Calzolari’s work offers a meditation on the experience of art across time, exploring the tension between the fleeting nature of life and materials and the perennial expressions of artistic traditions.

At 509 W. 24th Street, an enclosed temple-like space designed by the artist will be filled with a semicircle of canvases mounted on wood. Appearing monochromatic from a distance, the surface of each of the panels is finely disrupted with flower petals and thin white stems. With references to the centuries-old Japanese Nihonga painting tradition, which frequently used dry pigments derived from ground natural ingredients, such as minerals and shells, the installation is reminiscent of a large-scale decorative Shoji screen. This spirit of contemplative space is continued at 507 W. 24th Street in the main gallery where a triptych of brown and black felts is presented spanning 20 feet wide and 10 feet high. Evoking an altarpiece, the felts have been masterfully burnt by the artist in a process that creates subtle textural changes. The resulting gradations resemble a sky of gathering clouds and radiant light, ominous, yet pure. In a separate room, a new series of lead wall works will also be on view. Their lustrous surfaces are oxidized and delicately embellished with elements of burnt nuts, paper or string. In Calzolari’s ability to seemingly suspend a moment, an instinctive empathy exists between the artist and his materials—an understanding of nature’s mutability and inherent fragility.

Pier Paolo Calzolari was born in Bologna, Italy, in 1943. As one of the original members of Arte Povera, he was included in the movement’s seminal 1960s exhibitions curated by Germano Celant. Calzolari’s first exhibition at Marianne Boesky Gallery in 2012 was the artist’s first in the United States in over 20 years. Calzolari’s works are included in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, Guggenheim Museum, New York, Sammlung Goetz, Munich, Centre Pompidou, Paris, and Palazzo Grassi, Punta della Dogana François Pinault Foundation, Venice, amongst many others. He has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art (1985, 2013), Documenta (1992), Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume (1994), Venice Biennale (1978, 2007), Ca’ Pesaro, Galleria Internazionale d’Arte Moderna (2011), the Peggy Guggenheim Collection (2011), and the Centre Pompidou (2016). The artist currently lives and works in Lisbon, Portugal.

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Schedule

from February 16, 2017 to March 25, 2017

Opening Reception on 2017-02-16 from 18:00 to 20:00

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