18/09 - 10/11, 2018
-
Carla Accardi
The gallery has insisted I write a press release for Carla Accardi.
Two exhibitions in two spaces, mine in Brescia and Francesca’s in Milan, for a single project.
I gave it a few tries, before realizing that Carla simply doesn’t need a press release.
Everybody already knows who she was, and, frankly, I wouldn’t have anything to add to what is already common knowledge.
As a painter she was resolute and as person kind, yet never shy.
She always stood her ground; she did not hesitate to leave Trapani for Rome when she understood that the capital would offer better opportunities for carrying on her work.
She kept a very high standard for her beautiful painting right up to the end, even managing to surpass her companions from the Forma group.
Both for her work and as a figure, Carla acted as a link between her generation and those that followed, thanks to the interest of her painting and to her personal openness and approachability.
Young in her approach and style, her work has become emblematic of an era, a bridge that from the post-war period leads right to the Arte Povera and Conceptual Art movements, a world that has embraced her work with great respect and attention. Carla is the queen of Italian art.
Massimo Minini
The gallery has insisted I write a press release for Carla Accardi.
Two exhibitions in two spaces, mine in Brescia and Francesca’s in Milan, for a single project.
I gave it a few tries, before realizing that Carla simply doesn’t need a press release.
Everybody already knows who she was, and, frankly, I wouldn’t have anything to add to what is already common knowledge.
As a painter she was resolute and as person kind, yet never shy.
She always stood her ground; she did not hesitate to leave Trapani for Rome when she understood that the capital would offer better opportunities for carrying on her work.
She kept a very high standard for her beautiful painting right up to the end, even managing to surpass her companions from the Forma group.
Both for her work and as a figure, Carla acted as a link between her generation and those that followed, thanks to the interest of her painting and to her personal openness and approachability.
Young in her approach and style, her work has become emblematic of an era, a bridge that from the post-war period leads right to the Arte Povera and Conceptual Art movements, a world that has embraced her work with great respect and attention. Carla is the queen of Italian art.
Massimo Minini
- Giallo rosa, 2004vinyl paint on canvas, diptych
220×320 cm
Arch. n. 845A - Bianco nero, 2004vinyl paint on canvas, diptych
220×320 cm
Arch. n. 844A - Stendardo per Don Chisciotte, 2009paint on fabric
475×155 cm - Pavimento, 2009-2010painted felt on wood
400×1000 cm - Rosso oro nero, 2003vinyl paint and varnish on canvas
200×160 cm - Giallo viola, 2010varnish on plastic, plexiglas, electrical system
120×25 cm - Verde rosa, 2010varnish on plastic, plexiglas, electrical system
140×25 cm - Viola giallo, 2010varnish on plastic, plexiglas, electrical system
100×25 cm - Gioco blu, 2008vinyl paint on canvas
160×220 cm - Grigio azzurro abbaglio, 2010vinyl paint on canvas
160×220 cm