Press Release: Giuseppe Gabellone

New Works: 02.3
11.08.02


 


New Works: 02.3

November 8, 2002 ?nuary 12, 2003



Giuseppe Gabellone Milan, Italy

Juan Miguel Ramos San Antonio, TX

A•da Ruilova New York, New York




Selected by Francesco Bonami

About the Artist

Born in Brindisi, Italy, Giuseppe Gabellone's first US exhibition was organized by
the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL. Traditionally schooled in Italy,
Gabellone has exhibited widely in both Europe and the United States.



Individual exhibitions include such venues as Greengrassi, London, Enlgand;
Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo per l'Arte, Guarene d'Alba, Italy; Studio
Guenzani, Milan, Italy; and Frac Limousin, Limoges, France. Gabellone's work has
also been featured in the 1997 Venice Biennale, Italy; 1998 Sydney Biennial,
Australia; and Documenta 11, Kassel, Germany.




Giuseppe Gabellone was selected for the 02.3 residency by Francesco Bonami.
Francesco Bonami is the Manilow Senior Curator at the Museum of Contemporary
Art, Chicago, IL, and Director of Visual Arts for the 50th Biennale di Venezia,
2003.



About the Project

Giuseppe Gabellone upends the notions of authenticity and rationality in his
process-intensive sculptures. His unlikely objects, in this case, two rigid urethane
foam woodblock prints, are presented without an explicit context, yet they allude to
art history, architecture, and nature.




Curator Francesco Bonami describes Gabellone's work as "baroque, constantly
subverting the discipline of the style from within." This surprising twist on our
expectations compels viewers to rethink their initial impressions, because the
pieces themselves often seem to reference the ways in which we process our
understanding of the work. Gabellone suggests that an outer surface illuminates
an inner nature.



Growing up in the town of Brindisi, the artist began crafting his sculptural
pieces, structures, and finely crafted boxes, which are both earth-derived and
biomorphic, from clay, wood, and metal. Elegant and visceral, the works often
invite the viewer's touch.



For his residency exhibition, the artist recreated two 18th century Japanese
woodblock prints. Utilizing modern materials, including urethane foam and silicone
rubber, Gabellone has transformed the flat image into three-dimensional form.
Skilled in the technical aspects of mold making, Gabellone deftly manipulates
these materials, thoroughly engaged in the transformative process. Like many
early Italian masters, he follows a long tradition of simulation?recreation?ng
different materials over and over again. His abstraction or perversion of the
original, results in work with a harder edge that is more open to interpretation.
Gabellone gives equal attention to the material as to the process and to the
image.




Exhibition Dates

November 8, 2002 ?nuary 12, 2003



Opening Reception

Friday, November 8, 6:30-8:30 PM



Artists' Dialogue

Saturday, November 9, 6:30-8:00 PM

Featuring Giuseppe Gabellone, Juan Miguel Ramos, and A•da Ruilova. Moderated
by Francesco Bonami, Manilow Senior Curator, Museum of Contemporary Art,
Chicago, IL, and Director of Visual Arts, 50th Biennale di Venezia, 2003.



Brown Bag Lunch

Wednesday, January 8, 2003, 12:00-1:00 PM

Join us for a tour of New Works: 02.3 and a brown bag lunch provided by
Pecan Street Deli. Please call ArtPace to make reservations.




Event Locations

All events held at ArtPace, 445 N. Main Avenue. Free parking at Flores Street and
Savings. ArtPace is open to the public Wednesday thru Sunday, 12-5 PM,
Thursday until 8 PM and by appointment. There is no charge for admission.




 

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