Mapplethorpe, Look at the Pictures

Mapplethorpe | self-portrait

Mapplethorpe’s self-portrait. Image source: www.heretifm.com

Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures

“I don’t know how to describe them (flowers), but I don’t think they’re very different from body parts”. (Robert Mapplethorpe)

Robert Mapplethorpe took the most shocking photos, and at the same time the most refined pictures in the history of photography.
He didn’t mean to be a photographer; he wanted to be an artist.
And he became one of the most outrageous photographers appeared on the international photography scene.

I saw Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures, the new movie directed by Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey, and I realised that I didn’t know anything about this American photographer.
The documentary film will arrive in Italy at The Space Cinema on October 24th 2016, but I saw the preview of the movie, and I’ll give you my opinion.

Wanted Cinema, which had already given me the opportunity to enjoy the private show of Peggy Guggenheim: Art Addict, offered me a reserved show.

Robert Mapplethorpe | Ken Moody and Robert Sherman

Ken Moody and Robert Sherman, Robert Mapplethorpe, 1984. Image source: flavorwire.com

Everyone will give his/her own opinion on this documentary: some people will hate it, whereas other people will love it.
I can’t express a judgement on the movie suitable for everyone, because the film needs to be experienced in first person.
This film is a punch in the stomach, and an incessant provocation.

I love photography but those of Mapplethorpe are certainly not like the pictures of the Magnum Agency.
I knew Mapplethorpe’s beautiful black-and-white pictures, and the famous photo of Patti Smith, the American singer-songwriter, on the cover of her first album Horses. Frankly, I’ve never seen Mapplethorpe’s series “Portfolio X”, which caused a scandal and keeps doing it now due to its erotic subject.
Mapplethorpe portrayed extreme erotic practices in an explicit way, and the movie narrates the origin of those photos, and how photography became a medium for the artist to describe the body as if it was a flower, or any ordinary natural element.

The documentary film tells Mapplethorpe’s ambition, his life pushed to the limit, his friendships, his lovers, his relationship with his family, AIDS and his death, through archive documents and interviews with people who knew him.
Mapplethorpe’s life is narrated in a chronological order.
His quiet childhood, his art studies, and then his meeting with Patti Smith, with whom he had a strong love affair, and the research of an expressive artistic language.
She would become a musician; he would become a photographer.
She would get married and have a family; he would lose himself in the underground gay sex club scene of New York.

In this movie Robert Mapplethorpe appears as a beautiful angel, fallen and wasted, who had a great ability to seduce people and use them in order to reach his own goals.
At the end of his short life (he died of AIDS in 1989 at the age of 42) the artist was conscious of being a great photographer, but especially an artist not totally understood.
Mapplethorpe’s nudes were and are outrageous, they scandalise, they anger due to their insolence, but at the same time they propose an ideal of refined classical beauty.
Maybe he was an angel, or maybe he was a devil.
It’s up to you. You’ll decide, after watching the movie, who Mapplethorpe was.

SEE ALSO: Vivian Maier: the pioneer of street photography

Robert Mapplethorpe | Patti Smith

Robert Mapplethorpe, Horses – Patti Smith. Image source: unfototipo.com

Selfportrait | Robert Mapplethorpe

Robert Mapplethorpe – Autoritratto – 1975. Image source: www.fotocommunity.it

 Robert Mapplethorpe | Black And White

Robert Mapplethorpe Black And White on mapplethorpe still life . Image source: www.883zy.com

Mapplethorpe | self-portrait

Mapplethorpe’s 1985 self-portrait. Image source: www.theguardian.com

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5 things to know about Francis Bacon

Bacon | Photo

Artist Francis Bacon in front of the left panel of his ‘Triptych’ (1983) at his Tate Gallery show, 1985. (Photo by Michael Ward/Getty Images). Image source: http://floodmagazine.com

5 THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT FRANCIS BACON

Francis Bacon was an artist who broke the rules, hungry for life and passion, but he was also so immersed in the slime of emotions that he was almost overwhelmed by them.
He represented sorrow, anguish and a cruel world view.

Treviso will host an exhibition dedicated to Francis Bacon which it will certainly cause debate, because it happens every time with this artist and his works.
Bacon is a thorny artist, who flings his life made up of excess in your face, and obligates you to reflect upon your life.
As he was a damned artist, Bacon lived hard, and life put him to the test several times, but it also gave him the gift of portraying a complicated century, the 20th century, of which he was the mirror of its dark side.

5 things to know about Francis Bacon.

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Wilhelm Heiliger: Journey into synthesis

Wilhelm Heiliger | mostre San Giminiano

Wilhelm Heiliger: Journey into synthesis

Wilhelm Heiliger’s real and yet fantastic works will be exhibited at the  iSculpture Gallery in San Giminiano.
A photographic exhibition in which reality becomes abstraction and the portrayed subject loses its true meaning.

Wilhelm Heiliger | mostre San Giminiano

The relationship between shape and colour is the foundation of the history of art.
With artists such as Rothko and Pollock, or even earlier with the Impressionists, we witness the attempt to make colour the true protagonist of the expressive medium, assigning it a central role.
The colour palette is broken down and analysed in the smallest detail, with the aim of generating grace and balance.

In Wilhelm Heiliger’s work photographic detail becomes shape, whereas digital chromatic processing conveys new meanings and suggestions to the image every time.
A roof becomes a dividing line for the blue sky; a shell becomes a flash of light.
Reality becomes abstract and subjective.

Wilhelm Heiliger | mostre San Giminiano

INFO
iSculpture Art Gallery
29th september – 30 october, 2016
Via San Giovanni 56
53037 San Gimignano (SI)

LINK
http://www.isculpture.it

Palazzo Roverella, Rovigo and its marvels

Torre Rovigo

PALAZZO ROVERELLA, ROVIGO AND ITS MARVELS

Palazzo Roverella, Rovigo. A lot of people ask me “How do you choose the next exhibition you are going to see?” Well, basically, two elements make always the difference, especially when I’m undecided: the subheading of the exhibition, and the city which hosts the exhibition.
The first element is frequently the real theme of the exhibition, briefly summarised, and it must arouse my curiosity immediately. The second element is important especially if the exhibition takes place in a city I know little, or I don’t know at all.
I visit each exhibition as if I had a journey of discovery through unknown worlds, even though it takes place in my backyard.
And if it gives me the chance to see new things, it suits me.

I was in this mood when I went to Rovigo to visit the exhibition “I Nabis, Gauguin e la pittura italiana d’avanguardia” (“The Nabis, Gauguin and the Italian avant-garde painting”), which gave me the chance to discover Rovigo, a town I didn’t know.

In this post I’ll explain you what to see in this town.

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