Friday, 3 January 2025

Mutations Art Exhibition Schio 2024

Our tiny town of Schio in the north-east of Italy has an active art & culture scene. One of the annual events is the Mutations (Mutazioni) exhibition, held usually around the end of the year, held recently from 30 Nov. to 29 Dec. 2024 at Spazio Shed in the city centre.

I want to present 12 artists whose works I liked. I start with 4 sculptures and installations, and follow them by 8 paintings. Click on the pictures for a bigger view.

1. Sculpture by Paolo Ceola: It had a white jacket standing up in the air and asking "Where is the man?" Made of ceramic and oxide combination, it had a shining smooth finish.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Paolo Ceola

With this sculpture, Paolo expresses his fear that we humans are losing our identity.

He defines himself as a experimenter and researcher, looking for innovation, and working with different art-languages including photography, painting, sculpture, videos and films. You can check Paolo Ceola's other works on his Instagram page.

2. The Playful Installations of Roberto Marconato: There were two installations by Roberto in the exhibition. Both had the bust of a young woman, both with headphones listening to music, one in a pink t-shirt placed over a tower of balls and books, and the other with a pink knitted cap, connected to her computer-monitor by a cord.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Roberto Marconato

The installations seem to be talking about a future world, which is partially already there in our lives, where our work and free-time lives, both revolve around technology and even our human relations are mediated by it.

Roberto is a self-taught artist and he defines his art as "surrealistic", with a preference of using recycled materials in his works. You check his other works at his Instagram page.

3. The Colourful & Playful Animal Sculptures of Giorgio Nalon:  Giorgio's animals seem straight out of mythologies and fairy-tales with bright colours. There was a cut head of a zebra resting over a Rubik's cube, vaguely similar to the bronze horse-head sculpture by Nic Fiddian-Green at Mable Arch in London, also reminds me of Mario Puzo's Godfather where the horse-breeder wakes up with the bloody head of his favourite horse in his bed.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Giorgio Nalon

Then there was a colourful chameleon, again clutching a Rubik's cube in his front legs. Finally there was a blue frog with a crown on his head, the frog-prince, waiting for someone to kiss him. You can check his Facebook page to see his works of art.

4. The Ceramic Dress by Daria Tasca & Vania Sartori: I was intrigued by this installation Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Daria Tasca & Vania Sartoricreated jointly by 2 women artists - a fashion designer and a ceramic-maker.

It had a cream-coloured dress in silk-twill with a front-armour similar to a bullet-vest made of ceramic, out of which shining golden plates come out to surround the neck, while the hands-gloves have blue Sardinian wool gathering in 2 ceramic cups near the feet.

Daria started as a fashion designer and has been experimenting with painting on clothe, mixed techniques with photography and painting, and frescoes on wood. 

While, Vania studied to be an architect and then started to work in her family's ceramic workshop. To see their other works, you can check the facebook page of Daria and Vania.

After the sculptures and installations, lets now move to the works of painters.

5. The Pentatych by Luciano Gasparin: Luciano had put together five canvasses to create a combined rectangle, dominated by shades of reds.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Luciano Gasparin

His work was titled La Vita, the life, and had a quote by Seneca, saying, "No one would give you back years, no one would give you back to you; the time of your life will pass on the path you have undertaken and would never come back or to stop passing ..."

The painting combined a few figures - a head, a photograph and a church, while the remaining spaces were filled by abstract colours. It touched me deeply and I spent a long time standing there to look at it. You check his Instagram page to look at his other works.

6. The Immense Blue Ocean of Salvatore D'Oria: Salvatore is originally from Reggio Calabria in south Italy. His initial work was with oil paintings. In the recent years, he has starting doing more work with acrylic colours, which he uses to express motion and movement.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Salvatore D'Oria

His painting in this exhibition was titled L'Immenso, the Immensity. The blue and whites of this work expressed communications and how the modernity with rushing time takes away our individuality and identity.

7. Suspended Horizons by Paolo Pallara: Paolo had 2 canvasses in the exhibition, both titled "Suspended Horizons", one of which is presented here.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Paolo Pallara

He uses acrylics, tar, oil-pastels and ash to create the dirty yellow backgrounds with a tiny black sun and dark splotches of the horizon, from which black threads reach downwards. He describes these as, "In these suspended horizons, the becoming of days becomes the space where you find refuge ..."

The two paintings make me think of our polluted towns, as the evening falls and the skies turn yellow, both ugly and beautiful, at the same time.

You can check Paolo's Instagram page to look at his other works.

8. Urban Landscape of Claudio dal Pra: Claudio's landscape was located in Chiuppano, a tiny mountain town, not very far from Schio. It was an urban landscape, located clearly at the fringes of the rural-natural and is made ethereal by shades of yellow, old medieval buildings, and a complete contrast to Paolo Pallara's canvas-world above.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Claudio Dal Pra

In fact, Claudio's colours were lighter and brighter, his buildings seemed wrapped in the mountain mist, almost a dreamland.

You can check Claudio's Facebook page for his other works.

These two artists, Paolo Pallara & Claudio dal Pra, made me think about the aesthetic pleasures of the two completely contrasting styles, and how we can appreciate beauty in so many diverse forms.

9. The Masked Animal by Sergio Polli: Sergio had a gothic looking canvas in the exhibition, with dark colours and a portrait of someone with a hybrid animal face - the face looks like that of a horse, but it also has two big horns - perhaps it is a male deer?

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Sergio Polli

Animal masks have been used by the shamans of ancient people, they represent the capacity to visit the spirit worlds and to talk to the spirits. At first glance, Sergio's work looks like that. However, he has titled it the "masked animal", thus, it is an animal with a mask, probably referring to the animal instincts of certain persons who wear masks to seem civilised?

Sergio had recycled the wood from that used for making boxes, to make his canvas for this painting. His Instagram page defines his work as "recycling for painting, painting for recycling" and likes to use his art to express things for which there are no words.

You also check Sergio's Facebook page to see his other works.

10. AI Art of Annabella Dugo: Annabella had the prints of two very striking works, one titled "Meditation" and the other, "Sin of lust". These have been made with the help of AI.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Annabella Dugo

At one level, it was impossible, not to be fascinated by the two works, for their surrealistic hyperrealism and their choice of subjects & colours. At another, it raised the question about manual artistic skills.

I think that in the past, artists needed to have both, imagination and manual skills to create art. But with AI, it combines imagination with software skills, while the manual skills become unimportant. How is that going to influence our ideas about art? Annabella is a renowned and award-winning artist from Naples, so she has manual artistic skills, yet here she chose to use AI to create these works. How does that affect our views about her art?

You can check Annabella's Instagram page to look at her other works.

11. Painted Glass Works of Loria Orsato: Loria, based in Vicenza, uses glass in her works. In the two works presented in Mutations 2024, she had hand-painted glass on canvas to represent the "Family of long-necked queens".

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Loria Orsato

North-east of Italy, including the famous Murano island in Venice, are known for their glass related works and workshops. Perhaps Loria is a part of this tradition. She defines herself as an art designer and colour-researcher, and she hand-paints on glass.

At the same time, over the past decade, she has been active in dance-therapy, the Dancing Hands, inspired by the works of Argentine dancer Maria Fux. I had heard of Maria Fux from my friend Pio Campo and once gone with him to see him use dance-therapy for persons with mental health problems in Goias, Brazil. I feel that this combination of artist and dance-therapy, makes for an interesting person.

You can check Loria's Facebook page and her Instagram page to see more examplesof her works.

12. The Contrasts in Paintings of Daniela Toniolo: The 12th and last artists for this post is Daniela with 2 acrylic on canvas paintings titled "Rebirth" and "Opposites".

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Daniela Toniolo

Against a background of grey and purple, the two artworks had geometric spaces, like floating windows and glasses, which seemed to be reflecting into each other, making me feel as if I was getting lost inside a mirror room, which reminded me of the final scenes of Bruce Lee's film "Enter the Dragon".

Daniela is from Schio. About her works, she says, "It can be defined as fluid-ordered, with inexistent brush-strokes, highlighting the diluted and transparent colours, with counterpoints of bright white ..." You can check her work on Instagram.

Conclusions

I felt that this year, Mutations exhibition had fewer sculptures and installations, and fewer works with a strong visual-aesthetic impact.

Mutations-Mutazioni Art Exhibition, Schio, Dec. 2024 - Artwork by Eva Trentin

Let me conclude this post with a close-up image of cubes titled "Eva's Garden" by my friend Eva Trentin from the Mutations exhibition. Eva makes beautiful works by bringing together nature and its organic imprints on different surfaces. Her works are like labyrinths, the more minutely you look at them, the more facets you can discover. You can check more of her works on her Instagram page.

*****

Wednesday, 1 January 2025

Art & Sculpture At AIFACS

After visiting the M.F. Husain exhibition at DAG, I was walking towards the Central Secretariat Metro station when I saw the AIFACS building at Rafi Marg crossing, and old memories came flooding back.

Let me take a look, I thought, hoping to check the building that I used to visit regularly during the 1970s, when I was studying medicine in Delhi. In those days, the first floor of AIFACS had the British library and I had some very happy memories of hours spent there, looking at and choosing the books I wanted to read.

My first impression from the outside was that the building looked a little deserted, as if few people visited it, while I remembered it as an active space with people going in and out all the time. I asked a guard near the entrance and he explained the reason - the British library is no longer located in this building, it had shifted to Kasturba Gandhi road.

Artwork by Aatish Khobargade - Exhibitions at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

There were some exhibitions going on in the AIFACS galleries and I quickly visited a few of them. Here is a brief update about this visit (the image above has a wonderful sculpture by Aatish Khobragade).

The Lama in the AIFACS Foyer

The first thing that I noticed was that the AIFACS foyer has a new statue. It seems like that of a Buddhist lama. There is no plaque near the statue about the person. I asked about it but no one seemed to be sure about who he was. One of the guards said that it was a previous Dalai Lama.

Kushok Bakula Rinpoche statue - Exhibitions at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

I think that it can be the statue of the 19th Kushok Bakula Rinpoche (Ngawang Lobzang Thupstan Chognor,), who was sent to Mongolia as the Indian ambassador during the 1990s, when the country had come out of Soviet influence. I had seen one of his statues in a Buddhist monastery in Ulaan Baatar, and I thought that this statue looked like him. For Mongolians and Russian Buddhist he is seen as a very important religious figure.

I hope that someone from AIFACS (or any one else for that matter) can confirm about it - please tell me in the comments below.

Shekhar Ranjan Dutta & His Mythological Art

This was a solo exhibition on the ground floor of AIFACS, presenting the mythological paintings and some sculptures by the artist Shekhar Ranjan Dutta from Cooch Bihar in West Bengal. His paintings were on huge canvasses with a predominance of yellows, browns and reds.

Artwork by Shekhar Ranjan Dutta - Exhibitions at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

His works reminded me of the stories I used to read in Chandamama, a Hindi magazine, when I was a child. The mythologies of Hinduism are complex and often ambiguous, and I would have liked to ask him how he depicted his paintings which respect those complexities. However, he was busy showing around some persons (in the image below) and I was in a hurry, so it was not possible to talk to him.

Shekhar Ranjan Dutta at his solo Exhibition at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

Sculptures and Art in the AIFACS Basement

An international exhibition called Nakshatra, was going on in the basement of AIFACS on that day, including some artists from Poland. I did not visit the main room of this exhibition and only briefly spoke to two Indian artists who were presenting their works in that exhibition.

Rekha Soni & her art at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

The first was Rekha Soni who had a couple of water-colour paintings in the exhibition (image above). The second artist was Suzain Khan from Varanasi, who had some of her photographs in the exhibition (image below).

Suzain Khan & her art at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

Unfortunately, I didn't have much time to actually talk to them to learn more about their artistic journeys. I quickly went around in the central part of the basement, which was showing some sculptures. There were some sculptures there, which I liked.

Artwork by Surendra Kumar at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

Among the sculptures, there were 2 works of Surendra Kumar which I liked - Emerging Whispers (above) and Shades of Silence (below). Both these works were in plaster-of-Paris. Surendra Kumar is from New Delhi and is a multi-disciplinary artist - he also had a bansuri performance at the inauguration of Nakshatra exhibition.

Artwork by Surendra Kumar at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

I also liked the acrylic on canvas painting by Jyotsna Sharma titled Nature (image below).

Artwork by Jyotsna Sharma at AIFACS Gallery, Delhi, India - Images by S. Deepak

However, my favourite artwork in the Nakshatra exhibition, among the ones I was able to see, was a quirky and scintillating sculpture made of aluminium mugs painted purple (the first image at the top of this post) by the Mumbai-based artist Aatish Khobragade - it seemed so full of joy.

Conclusions

I came out of AIFACS feeling a little sad because in my memories, there were hours spent in that building with friends, many of whom are no longer alive. I had little memories of the art galleries below, my memories were mainly about the British library on the first floor.

My hurried visit to the exhibitions consoled me, while I remembered Salman Rushdee's words about imaginary homelands that we carry in our hearts - the old towns, buildings and homes that continue to exist only in our memories.

*****

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