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Matteo Basilé


Matteo Basilé, 2009, "Thisoriented People Series"
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Valentina De’ Mathà - Ápeiron



 Mixed media on paper.

NAG Contemporary
present:

Valentina De' Mathà | Ápeiron
curated by Fabio Migliorati
critical text by Fabio Migliorati and Matilde Puleo 
Opening: 12 Dicember 2009

NAG Contemporary \ Valentina De’ Mathà \ VDMphotographer \
_


Mixed media on paper.

Liminal States of Being
Fabio Migliorati

“He who has come only in part to a freedom of reason
cannot feel on earth otherwise than as a wanderer-though not as a traveler;
there must be something wandering within him,
which takes its joy in change and transitoriness."

F.W. Nietzsche – Human, All Too Human (1878).

For Anaximander (Miletus 610/609-547/546 BC), Greek scientist, astronomer, politician, and philosopher of the Ionian School, a follower of Thales, ápeiron, namely the indefinite, is the source of the universe. Ápeiron means the original, eternal and boundless mixture of all things. The elements are generated from it as a result of the progressive separation and contrast of opposites in a cosmology revealing its own sense in the parting from the indefinite granted to humankind through the burden of conflict, the struggle among beings as definite entities - which vanish and return to the indefinite Whole which they will be recast from. Ápeiron is the boundless mass of matter in which every single thing first breaks down and then dissolves at the end of a cycle set forth and governed by law and its inevitability, governed by an immortal, indestructible and even divine principle. However, said property does not comprise a blend of elements (merged into it, each with its own peculiar features), but it is rather a substance in which said elements are not yet what they are (i.e., facts not already defined).
The concept of Ápeiron is a response to the questions raised by Valentina De’ Mathà's art because it fully captures the definition of an unaccomplished reality as hinted to by the artist. The indefinite nature of primeval matter concerns the transformation into shape, which hence becomes style dense in meaning without identifying with the sensuality of any bodily element (albeit dealt with and even seducing and manifest). On the contrary, the elements can be sensed with an impetus leading to a farther, inner dimension lying on the edge of any reference to the content of corporeity and hence leaving a formalistic legacy, shells void of any bodily weight, and spurious blots or shapes. The mass of matter seems to be quantitative in nature, but it can be traced to orders of anthroposophical value.
A matter of philosophical anthropology, then...
The idea of «body» escapes the need for recognition. It is the relinquishment of the restoring mimesis to take the system of knowledge beyond the threshold of the pleasure of physical comfort: within the triumph of an entirely theoretical, almost aprioristic, and even ontological nemesis. It is the foundation of a sort of corporeity, which descends from and yet leaves aside the particular through a knowledge prior to determination: a restless formal genesis void of the appropriate repose to reassure truth, a deaf reality in a mental form, not ideal yet spiritual.
Through the unsettled sensitivity of a space bordering on the incorporeal, Valentina De’ Mathà investigates into the body, an open body, a body which, through its own extension, lends itself to a declared extensibility: freed yet constrained by the sacred sense of the cycle. The body is determined by the potential of matter even though space and time are locked within the fractal of their entity, while a boundary exists only as a limit, as the quiver of matter: ready, troubled and already dismantled. Because the being is infinitely strewn in things, opening itself to the absence of an end and to the existence of impossible definitions.
The artist's work inevitably tends to the transcendent. What the body encircles is always distant, external, outside: beyond what is encircled. Beyond mythology, mystical iconology is almost touched starting from matter, almost by a sort of physical make-up, which may nonetheless encounter religion, as every single thing that contemplates endlessness is exposed to the imminence of divinity. This dimension is still naturalistic yet governed by the laws of the universe, of the intrinsic universal. Everything is the fruit of a certain unrest: prime and eternal motion, unique in its kind, is the dynamic stage of evanescent bodies, capable of fading away until they become transparent (in the memory and dream of a shared universal belonging). Those bodies struggle to solve what they are, as they approach matter, which immediately becomes something else. It is both past and future; a faulty and fulfilled entity: atom, quark, quid, yuga... To reveal the way!
The body never gains a complete and fully enunciated sense, but, slave to its own being; it stands out of its imperfect anonymity, for the balance of its very opposites: first and foremost, formality and informality. It serves the logic of infinite worlds, which follow one after the other in an endless cycle (of birth, duration, and end). The opening of the body becomes the cosmic law of conflict, the application of duality in a change, which does not change, because conflict is implicit in the material perfection granted to humanity: both in the fortuitousness of the antimony between life and death and in the impossibility of escaping it. The body becomes the symbol of the original yet perturbed unity: the fruit of a break, which was first of all separation, namely a contrast based on the diversity from the endless stasis, from homogeneity and harmony, determining the condition typical of finite multiple beings different from one another, inevitably bound to break away from the Whole yet equally bound to return to it.
De’ Mathà's art is based on this, on the unity, on the Oneness of this original content, which erupts into matter and shapes it albeit never fully, revealing boundaries that are unseemly so, scattered in the surrounding void, fascinatingly liquid, casually diluted. The flood – the witness of matter fresh in form – becomes the rule emanating from an iconography yearning to define it, to capture it in the pragmatic tension of a functional language because it is archeosophical, organic to the point of becoming the symbol of an absolutely contemporary cosmography. After all, it is an abstract propensity of empirics by which a sort of panic gnosis (made of matter representing truth) pertains to the flesh as an ethereal path for the rest – diluted in the nothingness surrounding it, always as light as thought, breaking through all limits by a predetermined variation unstable in essence. Whence the metamorphosis, in a becoming of plain gestural expressiveness, neither hot nor cold, simply neutral as biology; always immature, without any emotional excesses or dramatic hyperboles. Just a trace: the physiological tragedy of life – that immediately brings to mind Nietzsche's «lucid lunacy» – with its spontaneous rhythm of full or void masses vaguely evoked in the journey towards the unknown, from the micro- to the macro-world, at the pace of contraction or expansion.
Everything and nothing alternate in penetrating one another, in a sort of chase to fill or empty the work: man (with his corporeity) on the one hand, and the world (in the white of the painted paper or the air surrounding the sculpture) on the other. The color of the figure, caught between the immaculate paper and the deserted air, in a pattern of interconnected repetitions: an imperfect subject along the borders, between insidious spaces about to blend what they perceive along the edges. One thing senses another and suffers from it. Always!
It is dependence in the eternal return (of every individual to the nothingness of the whole). Here lies the technical display, in the celebration of the cyclical expressiveness yearning for an unknown narrative, which, however, is knowledge. It is the narrative of the origin of order: from unfathomable yet undeniable chaos to entropy. It returns eternally. It is the eternal return as expounded by the German philosopher F.W. Nietzsche: a role of time in reality; from dreaming (freedom as possibility and fate as will), to nihilism (passive or active senselessness of life). Human happiness means redemption here – because of the salvific omen of circular time. Every instant of our lives is bound to return for always at the very moment of presence (if all things necessarily recur for eternity). The sense of time referring to the chaos which existence consists of is a curved trail in which every single thing perpetually tends to an infinite number of times without any metaphysical rule determining the linearity, the becoming of the past, present and future of moments depending on others. Time, the eternal return, sets the will of vital action, the commitment of human decision: in a chaotic reality of urges, vainly ordered by the deceit of a culture of morality. From a physical perspective, the measure of the universal force is assumed to be definite, but the time in which the cosmos exerts it is infinite: a cosmic rationale, which does not allow time to create anything immutable, but rather yields itself to the continual force of deliberate creativity.
This is the expressive narrative of Valentina De’ Mathà, who employs said energy for art. She is drawn in her necessity and lost in a deep feeling, towards the source and together with the barrier of complex constants. Valentina both charming and ritual. With orientalist charm, she dreams of modern solutions to ageless problems, while with an alchemical aura enshrined in the beauty of secrecy and research, she uses an art consisting in the cult of paper for the supreme ceremony of Matter. All of her works pulse with modern animism, alive by the continuity of each and true for the transience of all: the enchanting whisper of a shared intimism, which first permeates the obscure chemistry of an enraptured woman, then the enthralled taste of those who know how to understand her.
This is the eternal return over Valentina De’ Mathà's path of the sublime...
The eternal return of morphology as the liminal state of being.

Arezzo, November 2009.

_

Acids on emulsified paper. 40x100.



Newprint and papier-mâché installation.


Acids on emulsified paper. (12,5x13,5).

Biography
Valentina De 'Mathà was born in Avezzano (Aq), Italy, in 1981.
Art and sport caught her interests from the very beginning. She started to draw and paint since the early years of her life, being fascinated by color and material.
She studied rhythmic gymnastics for 6 years. At the age of 11 her mother gave her an analogical camera, with which she started taking daily pictures to her friends.
Since then, the camera is a fundamental mean of expression that never left her, used to tell of the daily life that surrounds her.
Later, a photographer gave her an old Pentax, a light meter and a Fusjika, with which she began to photograph people in train stations, subways and Markets in Rome, always been the city of her dreams.
At the same time she began to photograph parts of her body, winning the critics' prize at a competition. She was given her first digital camera, with which she will make a reportage in Kenya.
She practiced karate for 7 years at a competitive level and in 1999 was awarded the Black Belt 1st Dan for competitive merit.
She continued to paint in oils fascinated by complementary colors and red.
She enrolled to “ISA V.Bellisario” in Avezzano, where she attended first the experimental course of Weaving, Fashion and Costume, then passing to that of Goldsmith.
She studied for 5 years the hyper-realism and artistic anatomy, developing a propensity toward sculpture.
She gained a Diploma of Art Master with the highest average of the whole school and a Diploma of “Maturità” in Applied Arts.
After the Art Institute she tried to escape from conventional hyper-realism techniques and began her research on using the oil paint on canvas through the spatula technique.
She started to work exclusively on the body, focusing her attention on the bellies of the figures.
She enrolled the Faculty of Science of Fashion and Costume at the University of Rome “La Sapienza”.
In 2002 she exhibited in her first collective exhibition.
In 2004 her first solo exhibition is entitled "The plastic expressive chromatic”.
In 2004 she attended a course of Screenplay by Stefano Chiantini, Alessandro Tiberi, Luciano Federico, Luca Benedetti and Gianluca Arcopinto.
At the same time she knew the artist Domenico Colantoni, with whom started a deep friendship and received the incentive to study and travel.
Also in 2004 she began to study Cuban Salsa and participated in the Italian Championship of Caribbean dances. In the winter of 2005 she moved to Rome, Trastevere, and worked as an assistant to a renowned international artist. She lives in a studio in Via Garibaldi and spawned her first watercolors.
She left the canvas and oil paints and discovered the card cotton, water colors and inks that allow her to speak with more intuitive and fast gestures.
In 2006 she was selected for “Premio Celeste” rewarded by Gianluca Marziani.
In the same year she was among the finalists in the Abruzzo regional section for the Prize "Pagine Bianche d'Autore 2006 - 2007" by Luca Beatrice.
At the same time she attended the Course for Exhibitions Curators at the “Associazione Futuro 2000” by Ludovico Pratesi, with Marcello Smarrelli, Costantino D'Orazio and Francesca Limana.
Rome changed her life and opened a new world full of light and opportunity.
She changed house and moved into an apartment on the 3rd floor overlooking Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere, where she remained for a year and a half.
She surrounded herself with visual artists, filmmakers, writers, musicians and dancers of Argentine Tango. At the same time she began working with the gallery “Obraz”, Milan. She studied Argentine Tango with master Ricardo Louis Gallo.
In 2008 she arrived among the finalists of the prize "Arteingenua"
During the same year she left Rome and moved to Switzerland.
She studied etching.
She continued her research on the material and experimented new materials and techniques.
She deepened her knowledge on photography, sculpture, paper, lightening her painting and creating works on paper using emulsified acids.
In 2009, with a work on emulsified paper, she became a finalist of the prize "Premio Terna 02" in section Gigawatt eds Gainluca Martians and Cristiana Collu.
The same year she was selected for the prize "Premio Celeste 2009" curated by Gianluca Marziani with a sculptural installation made of paper in memory of the victims of the earthquake of L' Aquila and began working with the Gallery of Contemporary NAG Arezzo and Bergamo.
She participated in solo exhibitions, shows and art fairs.
Her artistic research regards material taking shape by itself, transformation of things, ever-changing dynamics of metamorphosis, becoming, fullness and emptiness of life, macro and microcosmos.
Through her work she creates tensions, dissonances, trying to match interior and exterior, contraction and expansion in between form and formlessness.
She works with water in general and organic materials, such as paper, capable of undergoing the changes of time.

Valentina De' Mathà | Ápeiron
curated by Fabio Migliorati
12 Dicember 2009 - 12 February 2010
Inauguration: 12 Dicember 2009 | 18:00

NAG Contemporary
via Bicchieraia 20
52100 Arezzo (Italy)

Basilio Silva


Colombian photographer Basilo Silva currently based in Buenos Aires.

Jasper Goodall




Jasper Goodall was born in 1973 in Birmingam, England.
His Father was an architect and his mother a fine artist and photographer who was instrumental in the UK Feminist Arts Movement during the 1970’s/80’s. He Graduated from The University of Brighton in 1995.

Ara Jo





Ara Jo graduated with a BA in ‘Fashion Design Womenswear’ from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in 2009.
Ara’s graduate collection ‘Hypnosis’ was selected to take part in CSM’s 2009 Graduate Press Show, gaining the attention of stylist Nicola Formichetti. Her designs have since been worn by Lady Gaga and shot for Dazed & Confused and OUT magazine.

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David Maisel


from 'History’s Shadow'.

David Maisel’s large-scaled, otherworldly photographs chronicle the complex relationships between natural systems and human intervention, piecing together the fractured logic that informs them both.

Gabriel Dishaw


Sculptural assemblage constructed from discarded materials, as glass, scrap metal, plastic, and wood.
Gabriel Dishaw specializes in high end junk sculptures ranging from as small as a figurine to larger than six feet tall. With experience as early as mid 1990's, Gabriel has designed and created many Junk Sculptures.

Rodrigo Almeida



Concreta Chair, 2009.

Rodrigo Almeida is a Brazilian designer who believes in the exploration of the culture itself, a process that helps him discover objects and ideas and transform them to new ones. This is not about a simple reproduction or improvement of the already existing concepts. This is more about a deep understanding of what they represent first and used as an inspiration later on; this way Almeida achives the cultural elements’ transmission to a brand new concept through a personalized manufacturing process.

More at Yatzer.
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Christina West




The Archie Bray Foundation, 2009.

Christina West is an avid people watcher with a dry sense of humor, active imagination, and an innate impulse to create with her hands. If you meet her and she stares at you a bit too long, she's probably just picturing you naked.

Ivan Puig


Hasta las narices, 2004


Km7, 2002.

''Inventar otras formas posibles. Solucionar, manufacturar; chácharas y tiliches. Pepenar, reciclar, alargar la vida de objetos obsoletos, la tecnología y la lucha contra su enajenamiento. Preguntar, cuestionar, incidir; el sarcasmo, la ironía y la paradoja. Me gusta la contradicción, me gusta la poesía, la simpleza y la complejidad juntas, la sorpresa y sorprender. Me gusta que la gente se sonría cuando la pieza detona en su interior; me gusta, incitar, me gusta pensar que el arte tiene una fuerza transformadora, política y creativa, con resultados concretos y tangibles y también con efectos sublimes y sutiles. Me gustan las herramientas, disfruto transformar los materiales y gozo de las formas, procuro que mis piezas tengan varios niveles de lectura; me encanta la metáfora y los juegos de palabras. Me fascina el humor sencillo y lúcido. Me gusta el sonido y su capacidad de evocar y suscitar. Disfruto mucho de los procesos y del trabajo colectivo, suelo ser obsesivo en la buena factura de las piezas. Jugar a la ciencia y de pasada dudar de ella, dudar de todo, dudar de la duda misma, rayar en lo metafísico Observo y concluyo., temerario y temeroso, me enfuerece la prepotencia y la injusticia social.''

Source: Ivan Puig

Steven Parrino


''Bent Twice'' 1991.

An artist and musician whose signature work was large-scale monochromatic paintings, mostly in black and slashed, torn and twisted, Steven Parrino was born in New York in 1958.


Blick in die Ausstellung | ''Pan-Shovel'' 2007 and ''Rustoleum'' 1992 by Olivier Mosset. ''Bent Twice'' 1991 by Steven Parrino.

Susie MacMurray


''Bristle'', 2008.

Susie MacMurray is a sculptor and installation artist.
Her work makes use of diverse and unusual materials such as human hair, balloons, bird feathers and latex gloves.

Valentin Ruhry


'L.R.V. (Lunar Roving Vehicle)', 2008.
Born in 1982 in Vienna.

Gino Rubert


“La oculista”

Gino Rubert was born in 1969 in Mexico, he studied fine arts at the Parsons School of Design in New York. Granted by Spanish government he worked during a year 93-94 at the Spanish academy in Rome.

Rodolfo Vanmarcke


Images courtesy of the artist
''Modern Solitudes'' by Rodolfo Vanmarcke
The contemporary human being has buried himself in a devastating solitude due to the triumph of industrialization. We have systematically celebrated the mass manufacture of products that are elaborated under the slogan “Our greatest product is the human capital”. Ironically, that same resource is already a prefabricated product, properly packed with the in vogue clothing, the technology of the moment and under the media diet of the day. We have transformed ourselves into isolated self-idols within a temple devoid of believers; crammed full of needs that are in fact invented by a society of identical people.
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Edward Lipsky



Skull I 2007.

Edward Lipsky was born in London in 1966. Actually he lives and works in London.

Found at: Bunnylicious
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