58. Biennale – Padiglione portoghese

Informazioni Evento

Luogo
PALAZZO GIUSTINIAN LOLIN
San Marco 2893, Venezia, Italia
Date
Dal al
Vernissage
09/05/2019

su invito

Artisti
Leonor Antunes
Generi
arte contemporanea
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Leonor Antunes rappresenta il Portogallo alla Biennale di Venezia col progetto

Comunicato stampa

Leonor Antunes
a seam, a surface, a hinge or a knot
Portugal Pavilion at the Venice Biennale
May 11–November 24, 2019

Portugal Pavilion at the Venice Biennale
Palazzo Giustinian
Lolin
30124 Venice
Italy

www.dgartes.gov.pt

Pre-opening: May 9
Public inauguration: May 11
Curator: João Ribas

The Official Portuguese Representation at the 58th Venice Biennale presents Leonor Antunes: a seam, a surface, a hinge or a knot, at the Palazzo Giustinian Lolin, curated by João Ribas.

Engaging with histories of art, architecture, and design, Leonor Antunes’ work reflects on the functions of everyday objects and their potential to be translated into abstract sculptures. The exhibition’s point of departure is Antunes’ significant research into key figures in the cultural history of Venice, such as the architects and designers Carlo Scarpa, Franco Albini and Franca Helg, as well as the legacies of the patronage of Savina Masieri and architecture of Egle Trincanato, who were both active in the city in the post-war period.

Working with traditional makers from the region, Antunes will link these cultural histories by looking at the intersection between Scarpa’s work and various forms of craftmanship from Italy, Japan and Portugal, with materials including glass, wood and cork. The exhibition will also draw attention to the lesser-known contributions of Masieri, such as her commissions for Frank Lloyd Wright and Scarpa, and Trincanato, who was not only the first female graduate of the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia, and author of a pioneering study of popular Venetian architecture from the XIII to the XVIII century, but also director of Palazzo Ducale and president of Querini Stampalia. a seam, a surface, a hinge or a knot will explore how both these women played a pivotal role in shaping a conception of Venice as a "modern" city.

The exhibition Leonor Antunes: a seam, a surface, a hinge or a knot, curated by João Ribas, was selected via an unprecedented open call competition organized by the Directorate-General of Arts in the summer of 2018. The Palazzo Giustinian Lolin, on the Grand Canal, is one of the works of architect Baldassare Longhena, best known for the Palazzo Pesaro, the Palazzo Rezzonico, and the Church of Santa Maria Della Salute.

The Portugal Pavilion was commissioned by the Government of Portugal - Ministry of Culture – Directorate-General for the Arts.

Leonor Antunes (b.1972, Lisbon) lives and works in Berlin. Her recent solo exhibitions include: the last days in Galliate, Pirelli HangarBicocca (2018); a thousand realities from an original mark, Marian Goodman Gallery, London (2018); discrepancies with C.P., Museo Tamayo (2018); the frisson of the togetherness, Whitechapel Gallery (2017); a spiral staircase leads down the garden, SFMOMA (2016); the pliable plane, CAPC Musée D’art Contemporain de Bordeaux (2015); I Stand Like a Mirror Before You, New Museum (2015); a secluded and pleasant land in this land I wish to dwell, Pérez Art Museum (2014); the last days in Chimalistac, Kunsthalle Basel (2013). Her work has been presented in recent group exhibitions such as: And Berlin Will Always Need You, Martin-Gropius-Bau (2019); 12th Gwangju Biennale (2018); Space Shifters, Hayward Gallery (2018); the 57th Venice Biennale (2017); Machines à penser, Fondazione Prada (2017); Condemned to be Modern, Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (LAMAG) (2017); Slip of the Tongue, Punta della Dogana (2015); Sharjah Biennale 12 (2015); 8th Berlin Biennale (2014); Singapore Biennale (2011) among others.

João Ribas is a writer and curator based in Porto. He was previously Director of the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, where he also served as Deputy Director and Senior Curator (2014-2018), and Curator at the MIT List Visual Arts Center (2009–13) and The Drawing Center (2007–09). Ribas is the winner of four consecutive AICA Awards for Best Exhibition (2008–11) and of the Emily Hall Tremaine Award (2010). His writing on art, science, and technology appears in various publications.