INDAGINE DI UNA PIEGA
curated by Chiara Boscolo
critical essay by Alessandra Maccari
Extended until the 15th of March, 2025
Opening Saturday, 25 January, 2025, 6.30-9 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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10 & zero uno gallery is pleased to present Indagine di una piega, a solo exhibition by Eva Chiara Trevisan (Treviso, 1991) who is exhibiting for the first time in its spaces in Via Garibaldi 1830, a few steps away from the gardens of the Venice Biennale.
The exhibition opens to the public on 25 January from 6.30 pm and is narrated by the words of Alessandra Maccari.
The ineffable borderline between painting and sculpture, the theme of drapery declined in a contemporary key and the vitality of matter are some of the knots around which the variegated corpus of works that make up Indagine di una piega unfolds. Eva Chiara Trevisan explores the quality of the surface and the possibilities of the fold, modelling a pictorial substance that preserves the sign of completed gestures and activates a haptic perception. The artist lives and works in Venice - the home of tonal painting, where the superimposition of colours and attention to luministic effects produce a plastic illusion - so her orientation towards colour as a means of expression is part of a tradition that characterises the lagoon city in its predilection for an element that is emotionally experienced by the viewer and charged with cultural meanings.
Trevisan’s approach to the chromatic datum is instinctive, he maintains a dialogue with it until he reaches a moment of suspension, and he does this by working on the ground, through a physical relationship with the acrylic substance; in the series Lo que toco (2024) he simulates drapery, an element that dresses the body but is affected by the atmosphere, whose curves generate light and shadow, exhibiting its depth. Colour manifests itself here in its corporeal dimension, the painting emancipates itself from the support and acquires the three-dimensionality, weight and idea of movement typical of reality, giving rise to embodied images where even the reverse can manifest itself. The philosopher Gilles Deleuze, recognising in the Baroque style a textile form that tends to free itself from subordination to a finite body, asserted that ‘perhaps painting needs to break out of the picture and become a sculpture’. In this sense, the artist intends to probe the plastic properties of pictorial matter by creating a hybrid form that mocks the canvas and not only can do without this support but also manages to imitate its textile qualities.
The works Orogenesi and Strato D (from the series Tessuto temporale, 2025-ongoing) appear to be aerial shots of the globe or cutouts of the earth’s surface that refer to the formation of reliefs and a region of the earth’s mantle, respectively. The term surface (from the Latin super-facies, upper face) designates a thickness that delimits a body affected by both inner and outer motions; this element is isolated by the artist by showing how it is composed of various layers that, as in the case of the ground, also fix a precise temporality and can resurface during landslides. Similarly, the irregularities on the skin of the works, the result of the artist’s gesture and the action of the environment, refer to those of the earth. This painting, which begins as a uniform field, ends up behaving like a baroque form, and thanks to its layering allows the creation of undulating movements with effects of dynamic tension. Deleuze in The Fold argued that ‘the informal does not constitute a simple negation of form: it testifies to form as a folded form that exists only as a “landscape of the mental”’: the fold for the author thus becomes the distinctive feature of the Baroque, in a continuous variation that relates matter and soul. Trevisan uses this principle to create the idea of movement that permeates his works; it is a metamorphosis that, as Georges Didi-Huberman states in Ninfa Moderna, has to do with drapery. The latter, elected by Aby Warburg as a ‘pathetic utensil’, has the power to animate the inanimate, and is ultimately an interface of the body - from the bandages to the shroud - that accompanies the passage between the existing and the non-existent, between form and formlessness. The title of the work Lo que toco - Naiadi (2024) refers to the figure of the nymph, a divinity of which Didi-Huberman illustrates the process of separation between body and garment, and consequently the emotions reverberate on the cloth whose fate is formlessness. The artist seems to want to reflect precisely on the fate of the fallen drapery, which obtains a visual autonomy, so her painting acquires a weight and tends to sink downwards. The works in the series Di-spiegare la materia (2024-ongoing), while retaining their object nature, are again placed on the wall and appear as earthy views that take on the appearance of a relic, of a fold locked in its development that conceals a large part of the work while maintaining its tension. The space included in the fold is part of the creation despite its existence being virtual, as is the void embedded in the painting.
One cannot speak of movement without considering the temporal dimension that, in the artist’s practice, is expressed in a continuum where the reminiscences of previous works find their
place in the following ones, creating a thread that binds the artist’s entire research. Each layer influences the layering of the other and each new layer modifies the underlying surfaces to constitute temporal thickenings where the past influences the future and the present intervenes on the lived. Trevisan thus seems to activate what Jean Dubuffet called the ‘kinematics of painting’, to indicate the act of the viewer reliving the elaboration of the work, and to show us how matter has its own memory.
BIO
Eva Chiara Trevisan (Treviso, 1991)
The artist’s research investigates the transmutation of matter through a practice that aims at a place where memory resurfaces at times, leaving unclear sensations and thoughts, born from the mingling of fragments of books read and conversations overheard. Painting and installation are the two media the artist uses in his research, which is strongly determined by the creative process and the relationship that is created between matter and time, between gesture and colour. The relationship with matter, that constant dialogue between eye and hand, between the tactile sense and visual perception, triggers the thought that then develops through alchemical and philosophical theories on emptiness. Observing his works, the viewer is guided to the discovery of the dimension of sublimation and led into a kind of bewilderment, in order to find nothingness, both of matter and in itself. He completed his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Visual Arts in Venice. After a residency in Matera (2017), she decided to undertake an experience abroad in Pamplona (Spain) at the Centro de Arte Contemporanea de Huarte. She returned to Venice as the winner of one of the ateliers at the Fondazione Bevilacqua la Masa in Venice for the year 2018/2019. In 2021 she is among the winners for the Just Imagine residency in Rome. In 2023, he took part in the Via Farini residency in Milan. In 2021 he held his first solo exhibition La Huella, Marina Bastianello Gallery, Mestre (Ve), curated by Marina Bastianello and in 2023 he held his second solo exhibition A Foreign Place, D Contemporary Gallery, London, curated by Raffaella Matrone In the meantime, he took part in various prizes and group exhibitions including ATELIER. IT: un viatico nelle pratiche pittoriche, curated by Andrea Bruciati and Stefano Arienti, at Istituto Villa Adriana e Villa d’Este - VILLÆ, Tivoli (2024); Pittura Italiana Oggi, curated by Damiano Gullì at Triennale Milano, Milan (2023); Premio Francesco Fabbri per le Arti Contemporanee, finalist, curated by Carlo Sala, Villa Brandolini, Pieve di Soligo (TV) (2022, 2020 and 2019) and Combat Prize, finalist, curated by Paolo Batoni, Museo Civico Fattori, Livorno (2017).
Exhibition view, Indagine di una piega, Eva Chiara Trevisan _ Ph: Filippo Molena
Exhibition view, Indagine di una piega, Eva Chiara Trevisan _ Ph: Filippo Molena
Exhibition view, Indagine di una piega, Eva Chiara Trevisan _ Ph: Filippo Molena
Exhibition view, Indagine di una piega, Eva Chiara Trevisan _ Ph: Filippo Molena
Eva Chiara Trevisan, Naiadi, 2024, stratificazione di colore acrilico, 86 x 60 cm _ Ph: Filippo Molena
Eva Chiara Trevisan, Di-spiegare la materia - E, 2024, stratificazione di colore acrilico, 28 x 60 x 5 cm _ Ph: Filippo Molena
La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (…)
curated by Chiara Boscolo, Claire and Paul di Felice
From November 16, 2024, to January 12, 2025
Opening on Saturday, November 16, 2024, 6.30-9 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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Galleria 10 & zero uno is pleased to present La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (...) the solo show by Marco Godinho (Salvaterra de Magos, 1978), curated by Chiara Boscolo, Claire and Paul di Felice, from November 16th to January 12th, 2025 at its space located close by the gardens of the Venice Biennale.
The exhibition opens to the public on 16 November at 6.30 pm and is narrated in the words of Claire and Paul di Felice.
What if everything was just a matter of encounters: with the sea, words, wind, people?
In the work of Marco Godinho, where life and art are one, daily poetry and shared creativity defy all temporality and spatiality. Moving, retracing one’s steps, this Ulyssean approach that brings him back to Venice, after being invited to the Biennale Arte in 2019 and to the Museo Fortuny in 2023, may be the embodiment of a recurring artistic attitude marked by pilgrimage and wandering, but also by contemplation, sharing, and action.
This return to Venice also allows for a reinterpretation of his work Written by Water, presented as a limited edition artist book of 30 by LAB by MAI Photography and Contemporary Art and “the experimentation with other gestures, mostly in situ, engaging with the exhibition space, the environment, and the context of the lagoon, the sea, the elements forming a floating temporality, a living space in constant mutation.”
The exhibition title gathers the first words of a long poem, “similar to a chorus or mantra with variable gestures, unfolding like a constellation within and beyond the exhibition space,” as Marco Godinho puts it. The 10 & zero uno gallery, a former butcher’s shop in the working-class neighborhood of Via Garibaldi, with its light grey naturally “patinaed” marble walls, suggestive decontextualized details, materials, and display cases, is not just the container of the works but becomes part of the content itself, transforming into “artwork,” a conceptual installation orchestrated by Marco Godinho where every element finds its place.
From the outside, the sun’s rays partially fall on the photographs and installation, which can be glimpsed through the letters of the title covering the gallery’s window. Inside, the photographs taken during the filming of his video Left to Their Own Fate (Odyssey) (2019 Venice Biennale), documenting the action performed with his actor brother—who silently reads the entirety of Homer’s Odyssey—during three initiatory journeys along the Mediterranean Sea, dialogue with fragments of texts from the new poem The Sea, The Wind... written by the artist with pencil on the walls of the gallery. The traces of a performance, where the artist transported sand from Lido Beach in his pockets, take on a particular place in this new context where the notions
of movement, migration, fragility, and transformation are symbolized metaphorically. What emerges from these two silent performances is the significance of gesture and the natural materials used. The poem is activated in a third aspect through the viewer, who carries away a fragment of the poem upon leaving the exhibition.
At the back left of the small gallery space, the small blue-painted room becomes a spiritual space where the artist’s book box is presented on a pedestal, allowing the visitor to discover in complete intimacy this work that becomes a temporary offering, a shared gesture from the artist discerning another materialization of the visual and textual journey.
The exhibition, through a poetic deconstruction and a re-enunciation of the poetic, visual, and performative, explores various aspects of migratory processes by creating interactions between human and non-human entities and navigating between nature and culture.
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Marco Godinho (born 1978, Salvaterra de Magos, Portugal) is a Portuguese/Luxembourgish visual artist who lives and works between Luxembourg and Paris. In 2019, he represented Luxembourg at the Venice Biennale and has participated in group exhibitions such as "Exils. Regards d'artistes" at the Louvre Lens in 2024. In late 2023, he launched the independent publishing house LUAR EDITIONS in Luxembourg. His approach leads him, with a certain economy of means, to employ various media as active environments—installations, performative gestures, videos, sound pieces, drawings, sculptures, photographs, as well as his writings, collaborative works, typographic compositions, artist books, and scenography. Influenced by literature, poetry, and philosophy, and nourished by a life marked by continuous displacements and cultural diversity, Marco Godinho's work reflects on issues of exile, hospitality, geography, and immigration. It often results from encounters with the living, blending everyday objects and elements of language. As he likes to define himself, a "nomadic traveler," he outlines the contours of a map of a world shaped by personal, biographical, and multicultural trajectories, inviting us to question our perception of the space and time in which we live.
Exhibition View, La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (…), Marco Godinho _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (…), Marco Godinho _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (…), Marco Godinho _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Marco Godinho, Left to Their Own Fate (Odyssey) & See Another Sea, 2019-2024, 44 colour photographs, poem, time (201 days), set of 101 postcards, wooden postcard holder, wooden shelf, daily performative gesture, Edition of 30 _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (…), Marco Godinho _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, La mer Le vent Le vent La mer Le sud Encore Le sud Encore Le temps Encore Encore Le vent (…), Marco Godinho _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Mitopoiesi Marzio Zorio
curated by Chiara Boscolo with a critical essay by Giuliana Benassi
From October 5 to November 10, 2024
Opening on Saturday, October 5, 2024, 6.30-9 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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Galleria 10 & Zero Uno is pleased to present Mitopoiesi the solo exhibition of Marzio Zorio (Moncalieri, 1985) at its gallery located just steps from the gardens of the Venice Biennale. The exhibition, opening to the public on October 5th at 6:30 PM, features two sets of new works that explore the relationship between sound and space, communication systems, and memory, all key elements in the artist’s research. The series of works displayed in the main room consists of various pieces resulting from Zorio’s recent work conducted inside the Murano furnaces in collaboration with Berengo Studio. Here, alongside local craftsmen, Zorio created a body of works that use glass as a sculptural medium and a sound membrane. On this occasion, glass becomes the primary tool the artist shapes, considering its ability to contain, propagate, and distort sound. This medium, molded by both Zorio and the master glassblower, hovers between maritime poetics and experimental laboratories, adapting to the technical possibilities of the material, which becomes the unifying theme of the exhibition. The relationship with the gallery’s distinctive space (a former butcher shop) shapes the exhibition into two distinct but osmotic moments. The first consists of vases lying like bodies floating in the sea, placed on a high table. These are sculptural objects that propagate sound, vibrating through the manipulation of the electromagnetic field surrounding them. This work, in particular, is conceived by the artist as a performative device, activated through interaction with the audience. Visitors are encouraged to touch and move the sculptures on the table, participating in the composition of a polyphony that changes based on the positioning of these vessels of emptiness—of unknown matter—which, in reality, are full of life. Here, the acoustic component blends sounds from the ocean depths with the natural vibrations of the space, evoking the enchanting songs of sirens: a particularly significant mythological image as a metaphor for the unknown, the connection between sea and land, human and animal. In this sense, the encounter with the other environment created by the artist shifts the visitor from an aquatic dimension to one linked to the earth and the force of gravity. Here, Marzio Zorio presents a series of seeds encased in laboratory test tubes, constantly moving and creating a steady, hammering rhythm. The seeds appear as living, germinating presences, almost driven by magical propulsion, while simultaneously recalling the cataloguing of a scientific and experimental laboratory.
In this dual vision, the transition from the underwater to the terrestrial realm merges and meets at the surface, creating a soundscape suspended between two worlds: from the depths of the sea to the land beneath our feet, the works engage in a harmonious dialogue, inviting deeper reflection on origins, life, survival, and knowledge.
BIO
Marzio Zorio’s (1985) research focuses on the creation of large-scale installations, in which the sound component is of fundamental importance, focusing on the spatial properties of sound and the relationship it has with the environment, architecture and human beings. He participates in numerous solo and group exhibitions, in Italy and abroad. In 2020 he won the #raccontoplural award organized by the CRT Foundation of Turin. In the musical field, he collaborated with Nicolas Jaar creating musical instruments used for his concerts and for the production of the album Telas (2020) and, later, composing a track for the album Caves – A Compilation of Silence, published by Jaar’s Other People record company. He has created performances such as Concerto per legno e ossa together with the artist Francesca Cola and is part of the duo BRUMA together with the artist and musician Bruna with whom he creates live performances and experiments with sound. Recent solo and group exhibitions include: Listening post, Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa, Venice (2023); Experimentum crucis, Excaserma Cassonello, Noto (2022); Princìpi - Building for generations, Biennale Tecnologia, Politecnico di Torino, Turin (2022); SUPERLAB, Bicocca Superlab, Milan (2022); Condition of the whole - Majority report, Galleria 10 & zero uno Venice (2022); Library, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Sala Santa Rita, Rome (2020); Artissima Sound, OGR, Turin (2018); The third day, Palazzo del Governatore, Parma (2018); If calling, Casa del Mantegna, Mantua (2017). He is the founder of SONRO - I Sound Every Night in the Rovescio dei miei Occhi - a collective made up of artists, curators and art historians that explores and disseminates practices related to sound in the visual arts.
Marzio Zorio, Mitopoiesi/Stupor Vacui, 2024, hand sculptured Murano glass, wood, electric components, 30 x 26 x 18 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Marzio Zorio, Mitopoiesi/Stupor Vacui, 2024, three hand sculptured Murano glass, wood, electric components, 120 x 100 x 115 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Marzio Zorio, Mitopoiesi (provette con semi) 2024, eight test tubes hand sculptured Murano glass, wood, electric components, 84 x 13 x 5 cm, ed. 1/10 _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Marzio Zorio, Mitopoiesi/Stupor Vacui, 2024, one hand sculptured Murano glass, wood, electric components, 30 x 26 x 15 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Marzio Zorio, Mitopoiesi/Stupor Vacui, 2024, one hand sculptured Murano glass, wood, electric components, 30 x 26 x 15 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Il gioco della sicurezza / the safety game
curated by Chiara Boscolo
with a critical essay by Gabriele Romeo
From June 5 to July 21, 2024
Opening on Tuesday, June 4, 2024, 6-9 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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10 & zero uno gallery is glad to present ‘Il gioco della sicurezza / The safety game’, the first solo exhibition of Baseera Khan (Texas, 1980) in Venice, at its space in Via Garibaldi 1830, near the Giardini della Biennale.
The exhibition, curated by Chiara Boscolo and accompanied by a critical essay by Gabriele Romeo, will run from 5 June to 21 July, with the opening on 4 June from 6 to 9 PM. Exploring the recurring themes Khan’s research, the show presents works representative of their practice from conceptual and material point of view. Gabriele Romeo offers a reading of these works that reflects on the artist personal and universal motifs:
“These works are directed to explore a spatial and relational surface within which Baseera, as a “Muslim woman”, self-determines ‘queer’ gendered themes thanks to their strong personality and the enunciating dialectic they are able to give to their multifaceted elaborations - now inscribing embroideries on suspended fabrics, or architectural investigations imprinted with oriental decorative motifs. All this in order to anthropologically reconstruct a stereoscopic view of a feminist who is proud of their brown skin and, above all, of their Indian-Afghan origins.
Based on what I observe and deduce from the works in the exhibition, I cautiously believe that the judgment of this analysis can be reconciled with the thematic and polysemic focus that comes from a decolonization of the narrative projected on a reworking of traditions.
The theory of reworked traditions, extensively discussed by the art historian Katy Hassel in her book “The Story of Art without Men” (2022), is juxtaposed with the compositional methodology and creative composure with which Baseera configures, in a roundabout way and from a generational perspective, their time to our feeling time, through the alphabetic inscription of “algorithmic play” in the multimedia devices they themselves uses, linked to the intrauterine fetish of the Xennial generation theorized by the Australian Dan Woodman.
Baseera’s art is bodily, objectifying, tangible, a direct grasp of the courage to unhinge all doubts about clichés, shattering all forms of taboo and prejudice. It achieves this by challenging the notion of iconoclasm, inserting iconic elements and pictograms that become figurative views of the self-determining word. The same is true of their gold embroidery on black robes, which in my opinion looks like a cross between the Islamic technique of Suzani and the Indian technique of Chikankari. One of their psychedelic prayer rugs reads “I am a body,” an idea that reinforces Khan’s identity by liberating their gender dignity. Baseera thinks of a direct consciousness between the human and the other human, a self-determining phenomenological inquiry within society. This is the exact opposite of what Barbara Kruger had to propose in 1989 in the work entitled Your Body is a Battleground.
And more, accessories, clothes, shoes: a whole world that belongs to the memory of intercultural integration between Western customs and Eastern memories, between the exuberance of social consumption and the wastefulness of a humanity that pollutes and exploits all its creation without scruples.
For this exhibition, Baseera is showing a selection of their most recent fine oil paintings on panel, depicting vases, pearls, and improbable skies. Painted in 2024, all of them, from The Safety Game / Bronze Bead Weight (Green) to The Safety Game / Bronze Balustrade Wight with Loose Rings (Peaches), can be considered as multifunctional “gravitational environmental games” that speak of the force of gravity in any form enunciated by the human hand that operates its gesture within a thermodynamic and self-critical spatial context. From this we might infer an ironic rhetoric about the polygamous individuation of the sexual attraction drive, as is evident in The Safety Game / Stainless Stell Safety Plug (Ruby Reds), with which the corresponding Murano glass sculpture, produced by the hands of master glassmaker Marco Giuman, is associated. Glass, in Baseera’s investigative intentions, becomes the medium-optic for a macro-view on the history of the export of beauty and desire, as it happened in ancient Venice, but in this context it takes on the significance of import/export in the trafficking of exploited prostitutes. All of Baseera’s subjects are “seductive” because the materials themselves are expressions and determinations of a body politic that beguiles and fascinates its user. Oil takes on the meanings of power and geopolitics, plastic symbolizes the refinery and pollution, while textiles are transformed into an anonymous workplace: always open concepts that denounce the gravitational force of these dangerous games”.
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Baseera Khan (Texas, 1980) is a New York-based artist focusing on performance, sculpture, and installation, working with a polysemantic and multimaterical language. Their work explores materials and color and the themes of labor, family, religion, and spirituality. “Painful Arc, Shoulder High” is on display at The High Line Park, NYC until summer 2024. Khan’s first solo museum exhibition was at the Brooklyn Museum of Art (2021-22), with a touring exhibition at Moody Arts Center and Contemporary Arts Center (2022-23). They have exhibited at the Wexner Center for the Arts, New Orleans Museum of Art, Munich Documentation Centre, and more. Their performances have been premiered at several locations including the Brooklyn Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Khan has held residencies at The Kitchen NYC and Pioneer Works and won the Artist Prize for the MTV/Smithsonian Channel docu-series “The Exhibit” (2022-23). Their works are in major collections like the Solomon R. Guggenheim and Whitney Museum of American Art. Khan holds an M.F.A. from Cornell University and a B.F.A. from the University of North Texas.
Exhibition View, Il gioco della sicurezza / The safety game _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Il gioco della sicurezza / The safety game _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Il gioco della sicurezza / The safety game _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Baseera Khan, The Safety Game / Blue strand, 2024, hand sculpted Murano lattice glass, 6 1/8 x 2 3/8 in (15,5 x 6 cm) _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Baseera Khan, Tent Square, Pink, 2023, archival inkjet print, artist’s custom frame, 20 x 16 in (50,8 x 40,6 cm) _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Carlo Benvenuto - Mimmo Paladino
In collaboration with Galleria Mazzoli, with a critical essay by Paul di Felice
From April 16 to May 19, 2024
Opening on Wednesday, April 17, 2024, at 6:00 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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10 & zero uno gallery, concurrently with the opening of the 60th Venice Art Biennale, is glad to present the bipersonal exhibition ‘Carlo Benvenuto - Mimmo Paladino’, realised in collaboration with Galleria Mazzoli of Modena, inside its spaces in Via Garibaldi 1830, halfway between the Giardini della Biennale and the Arsenale.
From 16 April to 19 May the gallery will host works by Carlo Benvenuto and Mimmo Paladino accompanied by Paul di Felice’s lucid and original analysis which hightlights the “transcendental dialogue” between the two artists’ production:
“Despite their stylistic differences, these two artists – one coming from painting to photography and sculpture, and the other having started with photography before moving on to painting and sculpture – share a singular approach to the representation of everyday reality and the exploration of cultural archetypes.
Carlo Benvenuto stands out for his attentive and distanced gaze upon common everyday objects through a certain photographic objectivity and a formal projection into space. Inspired by the still life tradition, he unintentionally captures a kind of ephemeral beauty beyond the narrative potential of ordinary objects, deconstructing stylistic references and creating paradoxically timeless situations.
His photographs of bottles, cups, plates, and tablecloths, enhanced by subtle unusual elements that disturb the tautological effect, are striking for their strange figuration. His works emphasize the importance of the immediate presence of things that intervene in creation. By avoiding complex artistic choices and trying to interfere as little as possible with the subjects that present themselves, he also plays somewhat on Duchamp’s notion of the inframince in his approach to representation. His works, in their apparent simplicity, question the relationship to the photographic image and its relation to indexicality and iconicity, as well as to the real and the original, as in his series of glass sculptures made in Murano. The three elements based on water glasses found in the house give the illusion of glasses filled to the brim with water, but are actually sculptures of solid glass that the artist describes as “glass stones”, suggesting in an oxymoronic way the symbolism between solidity and fragility.
On the other hand, Mimmo Paladino draws inspiration in his own way from the mythological and archetypal heritage of humanity, exploring personal signs and universal symbols through an allusive language and an evocative aesthetic. As a prominent figure of the Italian Transavantgarde, Paladino brings to life enigmatic and timeless figures, invoking ancient narratives and characters that have marked humanity or simply come from personal mythology. His work transcends cultural, spatial, and temporal boundaries, offering a visual meditation on the daily and universal themes of life, death, and transformation, and, notably with his series of “Vases,” is also rooted in the artistic territory of his origins, the Province of Benevento.
Achille Bonito Oliva speaks of tattooing when he refers to the surface, or even the “skin”, of the vases, on which the artist applies his abstract and figurative drawings that fit the concave shape of the container. The critic A.B.O. refers to the recurring idea of secrecy in Paladino’s work, describing ceramics as “a ductile material to display his images while offering the protection of a secretum that must remain as such in the envelope of the vases.”
These secrets are not revealed by the sometimes enigmatic titles, but they can nevertheless provide reading clues through their cultural references.
This openness to interpretation reflects a contemporary sensibility, questioning the idea of fixed meanings and inviting dialogue between artist, artwork and viewer.
By capturing simple and familiar moments in the confined space of his home, Carlo Benvenuto invites the viewers to contemplate daily reality in a new light, revealing the hidden originality behind apparent banality, while Mimmo Paladino, by taking them on a journey through the history of humanity, invites them to reflect on the mysteries of human existence while also exploring themes of archetypes and personal mythology.
Whether through photography and sculpture in the case of the former and painting and sculpture in the case of the latter, their various personal artistic languages express themselves through questioning the thresholds of sensitivity and intelligibility, visibility and invisibility.
However, although their artistic expressions differ, Carlo Benvenuto and Mimmo Paladino share a common artistic approach to the archetypal simplicity of objects and a visual interpretation capable of transforming our view of the everyday and the contemporary.
——
Carlo Benvenuto (Stresa, 1966) is distinguished by a poetics that explores the least say possible, aiming to
capture the essence of everyday objects through a gaze that transcends the visible. Working in his own home, he photographs objects on a 1:1 scale against neutral backgrounds, creating compositions that transform the everyday into the mysterious, suspended in an atmosphere of refined delicacy. His minimal style, which denies any superfluous expressive intention, highlights his admiration for classical painting and strict control of form and light. Benvenuto’s works have been exhibited in prominent galleries and museums, including Mart in Rovereto, MACRO in Rome, MAXXI in Rome , GAMeCdi Bergamo, and PAC in Milan, and most of these institutions feature his works in their collections.
Mimmo Paladino (Paduli, Benevento, 1948) began his artistic career influenced by the cultural effervescence of the 1960s, with a particular interest in photography and drawing. His research evolves from initial conceptual experiments to a figurative painting that integrates geometric and symbolic elements, such as branches and masks, reflecting an ongoing dialogue between myth and contemporary reality. Beginning in the 1980s, with his participation in the Transavanguardia movement, Paladino established himself as an artist capable of fusing painting, sculpture and installation into a cohesive body of work that investigates the universal themes of life, death and spirituality. His sculptures and installations, including the emblematic salt mountain in Piazza del Plebiscito in Naples, have marked the artistic urban landscape. Paladino has exhibited and is in the collections of museums around the world, including MOMA and the Guggenheim in New York, and has received significant retrospectives.
Exhibition View, Carlo Benvenuto - Mimmo Benvenuto _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Carlo Benvenuto - Mimmo Benvenuto _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Mimmo Paladino, Euclide 4, 2020, acrylic on canvas, 100x100cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Mimmo Paladino, Vasi Ermetici 11, 1993, majolica painted in polychrome, h: 31cm diam: 19,5cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Carlo Benvenuto - Mimmo Benvenuto _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Mimmo Paladino, Etrusco, 2023, mixed media on juta canvas, 80,5x60,5cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Carlo Benvenuto, Untitled, 1999, Murano glass, 12x7cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Carlo Benvenuto, Untitled, 2020, laminated photo print on aluminum, 48x72,5cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Carlo Benvenuto - Mimmo Benvenuto _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Carlo Benvenuto, Untitled, 2016, laminated photo print on aluminum, 70x135cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Colando dalle stelle oscure (Flowing from Dark Stars)
Andrea Luzi
Curated by Chiara Boscolo, with a critical text by Carlo Sala
From January 20 to February 24, 2024
Opening on Friday, January 19, 2024, at 6:00 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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10 & zero one is pleased to present the first solo exhibition of Andrea Luzi (Ancona, 1997), that will take place in its showroom in Via Garibaldi 1830, close to the Gardens of the Venice Biennale (from January 20 to February 24, 2024, opening on Friday, January 19, at 6:00 PM).
The exhibition project, titled “Flowing from Dark Stars,” curated by Chiara Boscolo, takes its name from one of the artist’s works and is described through the words of Carlo Sala:
“The viewer is confronted with a figural universe, distinctly dystopian, characterized by anthropomorphic figures of challenging decipherability, appearing as the outcome of an ongoing metamorphosis. Each subject embodies a character of incarnation, a translation between man and animal, beast and deity. [...] In the painting ‘The Greatness of Nothing’ (2023), the display is a kind of modernization of the ancient polyptychs that were supplanted by unified background altarpieces at the end of the 15th century. Similar to those works, Luzi’s piece is composed of various fragmented figural elements, forming a choral narrative as a whole. Within the painter’s canvases, we find an iconographic miscellany resulting from a multitude of stimuli and inspirations that never overflow into direct citation but are the product of suggestions derived from the worlds of music, philosophy, graphics, and literature, alternating between high and popular culture. In this, as in other works, the reading of the essay ‘In the Dust of this Planet’ (2011) by the American thinker Eugene Thacker was crucial, a text that seems to update historical pessimism to the peculiar moment dominated by the climate crisis, the danger of mass extinction, and the ontological incapacity to project new futures. Thacker’s nihilistic reflections provide a perfect theoretical framework for Luzi’s paintings, where references to the occult world, the magic circle, a subject that often appears invoking an idea of magical ritual, of a space suspended between the sacred and the profane, the natural and the supernatural, normativity, and transgression. Luzi’s paintings reveal the enactment of a kind of contemporary Bestiary that, following the tradition of medieval ones, enumerates real or imaginary animals, laden with reminiscences of pagan culture.
The iconic forms that appear on the canvases undergo specular mutations in the creative process, where there is initially a pictorial subtraction, followed by a figurative construction guided by the suggestions provided by the chromatic material, bringing forth a series of forms not entirely foreseen. In the compositions, unstable and contorted architectures, mysterious animal forms come to life, aspects that, through the act of painting, configure themselves through the study of volumes, lights, and shadows, delineating visionary and dark worlds. It is worth noting how the author skillfully translates into painting a sensitivity derived from the practice of the monotype graphic technique, a print pulled in a single copy from a drawing made with oil colors on a plate that maintains a series of material peculiarities; the chromatic palette of these works tends toward monochrome (another affinity with the monotype) with a series of earthy colors of predominantly Nordic descent.
The work ‘The Abomination Wavers, Flowing from Dark Stars’ (2023) was inspired by the famous story ‘The Call of Cthulhu’ by H.P. Lovecraft. The painting features incongruous perspectives, buildings with distorted forms (made of a viscous substance at times and immersed in nebulous atmospheres) that seem to recall the words of the American writer when describing the ‘cadaverous nightmare city of R’lyeh’ built by ‘vast, disgusting forms descended, flowing from dark stars.’ These architectonic elements with amorphous morphology and dramatic tones also appear in works like ‘Reaper Power’ (2023), a polyptych that seems to overlap and blend distant inspirations in history and time: from temples to reliquaries, from ephemeral Baroque constructions to the exuberance of twisted columns. However, the wonder and awe of the seventeenth century seem to have been replaced by a feeling of the uncanny, where a sum of familiar images leads to the creation of a sense of disorientation and attraction to something unsettling that escapes our perception, well outlined by Mark Fisher in his last book published during his lifetime dedicated to the phenomenon of the weird. These places are built by the author in a gestural, direct way, without any a priori or philological reflection, as they are the result of a magma of creative substance that generates unstable worlds. ‘Reaper Power’ (whose title refers to the agricultural machine) evokes, on the one hand, the cyclicity of seasons and rituals related to earthwork, and on the other, the concept of power, alluding to the inevitability of death, for a precariousness and transience expressed in the painting through narrative dimension but also at a formal level, where everything is unstable and on the verge of collapse, like the spirit of the time we are living in.”
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Andrea Luzi (Ancona, 1997) is a visual artist who lives and works between Milan and Filottrano. Access to abstractly dystopian scenarios is indicated in Andrea Luzi’s pictorial works through a perspective similar to vertigo: not only in the classical visual sense, that is, the disorientation of the gaze in the multiplication of details and spatial planes on the surface. Vertigo also in the demand for an imaginative course: hypothesizing, in the wake of sci-fi, the consequences and deviations of the anthropocentric landscape. Concretions sprout as organic simulacra telling of a disintegration and then a recomposition of shreds of matter, tails, scales, organs, traces. Therefore, giving up stable coordinates and morphologies, buried under a halo of desolate fog, or encountering other landscapes that, by chromatic and iconographic choice, are the schizophrenic, psychedelic, hallucinated counterpart. Finally, proceeding tentatively, from the first entry point encountered on the canvas, and slipping inside accepting its tortuosity that follows. The narrative on decay is exacerbated by the material and precious use of color; thus, against backgrounds of mists and swamps, new primitive idols already reassemble their cults and sumptuous architectures with the wreckage of the past.”
Exhibition View, Colando dalle stelle oscure, Andrea Luzi _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Andrea Luzi, Rullanti pestilenziali scandiscono l’inno della rovina, 2023, oil, acrylic, fabric colour and resin on linen, 40x30cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Colando dalle stelle oscure, Andrea Luzi _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Andrea Luzi, Potenza mietitrice, 2023, oil, acrylic, fabric colour and resin on board, 3 pieces 21x15cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Colando dalle stelle oscure, Andrea Luzi _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Andrea Luzi, Al centro della terra e in fondo al mare, 2023, oil, acrylic, fabric colour and resin on linen, 20x15cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Andrea Luzi, Waxed ace, 2023, ooil and fabric colour on canvas, 9x6,5cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition View, Colando dalle stelle oscure, Andrea Luzi _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Andrea Luzi, “L’abominio vacilla, colando dalle stelle oscure”, 2023, oil, acrylic, fabric colour and resin on board, 23x37cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Strato impermeabile
Gennaro De Luca
Curated by Chiara Boscolo
From November 12, 2023 to January 07, 2024
Opening on Saturday, November 11, 2023, at 6 PM
10 & zero uno, Castello 1830, via Garibaldi, Venice
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10 & zero uno is pleased to present the first solo exhibition of the young artist Gennaro De Luca (Cassino, 2001) that will take place in its showroom in Via Garibaldi 1830, close to the Gardens of the Venice Biennale (from November 12, 2023 to January 7, 2024, opening Saturday, November 11, 6 p.m.).
The exhibition project titled "Strato impermeabile," curated by Chiara Boscolo, revolves around the material used by the artist for his latest sculpture research phase. The artist has used wax to cover the objects, which serves as a conceptual barrier to reduce the density of the image and its meanings
De Luca's creative process develops in a borderline area between what is ephemeral and what is not. He often uses discarded materials like cardboard boxes from nearby supermarkets to create his artwork. Through his work, he seeks to investigate and shed light on various aspects of our society, particularly by highlighting the concept of waste as a reflection of human existence. In fact, these objects from industrial processing, stored inside a wax casing, aim to confront the permanence of art with the transience of these materials destined for a limited life. The artist's use of wax also reflects the functions given by its chemical and physical properties that make it an excellent insulator and see it commonly used for food preservation, through an interpretation of this ability the object is isolated from its meanings by going to enhance the ephemeral through a sculptural language.
Further reason for analysis is the transformation of what we can identify as structural cardboard skeletons into real works of art given by repeated gestures. A movement that has something of the hypnotic. A continuous dipping of the brush in wax, liquefied and gently applied to the structure. Layer after layer compares organic and inorganic through content analogies between the elements, questioning the relationship between meaning and signifier.
Presented in the exhibition is a body of six new works specially conceived and created for the characteristic spaces of the former butcher shop on Garibaldi Street. Four of them invade the largest room of the gallery developing mainly on the floor while the remaining two are placed on pedestal in the small room on the left where they are enveloped by an aura that seems to elevate them to a sacred object.
Gennaro De Luca's work is a fusion of different influences, in which industrial and artisanal elements (see his predilection for the use of kerosene beeswax) come together, giving rise to works intended to provoke in viewers reflections on a language made up of contrasts.
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Gennaro De Luca was born in 2001 in Cassino, the city where he graduated from Liceo Artistico in 2020. He is currently attending the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome. He conducts an artistic research that questions through the languages of sculpture, the relationship between meaning and signifier, posing as points of reflection paradoxes and analogies that clash with themes such as transformation and the relationship between ephemeral and durable, often present in his work. He has recently taken his first steps in the art world by participating in group exhibitions such as: the Biennale del Salento, Ecomuseo della Pietra Leccese ,Cursi (LE) (2021); Eden, Palazzo Venezia, Naples (2022); Cinguettii, Maranola Formia (LT), in collaboration with " Fondazione Volume!" and "Seminaria sogninterra"(2022). In 2023 he is among the winners of WAO, We Art Open, CREA Cantieri del contemporaneo, Venice.
Exhibition view, Strato impermeabile, Gennaro De Luca _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition view, Strato impermeabile, Gennaro De Luca _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Gennaro De Luca, Senza titolo (Strato impermeabile), 2023, corrugated cardboard and mixed wax, 36x17x15 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Gennaro De Luca, Senza titolo (Strato impermeabile), 2023, corrugated cardboard and mixed wax, 42x31x29 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition view, Strato impermeabile, Gennaro De Luca _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Gennaro De Luca, Senza titolo (Strato impermeabile), 2023, corrugated cardboard and mixed wax, 90x56x63 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Gennaro De Luca, Senza titolo (Strato impermeabile), detail, 2023, corrugated cardboard and mixed wax, 90x56x63 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Exhibition view, Strato impermeabile, Gennaro De Luca _ Ph. Filippo Molena
Gennaro De Luca, Senza titolo (Strato impermeabile), detail, 2023, corrugated cardboard and mixed wax, 70x18x11 cm and 36x17x15 cm _ Ph. Filippo Molena