Massimo De Carlo Gallery is proud to present Günther Förg/Lucio Fontana: Bronze/Terracotta. The exhibition, by combining Günther Förg’s unique sombre bronze paintings and Lucio Fontana’s early ceramics, aims to explore how Förg and Fontana reflected on materiality and on the gesture. Both artists use the ancestral materials bronze and terracotta in a specific way: the tangibility that the artists have applied to these mediums in each work manages to translate the sense of the metaphysical in the vocabulary of art.
Günther Förg/ Lucio Fontana: Bronze/Terracotta attempts to recreate an imaginary dialogue between the two artists: Günther Förg’s bronze paintings were initially inspired by Fontana’s ceramics, the physicality of his bronze works resonating the idea of Fontana’s terracotta, both artists questioning the idea of sculpture, painting and object-hood.
The exhibition presents a series of bronze works by the eclectic German artist Günther Förg, who was highly inspired by abstract influences and modernism, which represent the different ways in which the artist interacted with the metal. In the ‘bronze paintings’ the artist challenges and evolves from the stereotypical notion of canvas by using bronze as the base for these works: the result is that these dimensional pieces have an immersive character, where the painterly gesture combined with the physicality of bronze draws the viewer to a reflection on the sublime and sobriety. The question of how these pieces are defined as paintings rather than sculptures is brilliantly resolved by the artists idea of making each piece unique, the original plaster often destroyed in order to enhance the notion of uniqueness.
Works such as the cast bronze mask, inspired by ancient death masks, introduce a more sculptural element, which is the key to the ceramic works by the Italian artist Lucio Fontana. Fontana is best known for his iconic slashed monochrome canvases ‘ Concetto Spaziale’, so we are delighted to show intriguing works such as his early ceramics, shedding new light on the practice of one of the founders of Spatialism. Here his usual minimalist and rigorous approach to art is questioned by the artist himself, as through the roughly hand made ceramics he explores different ways of concretizing his research in uniting time and space, challenging in a modern key a more classical medium. The ceramics sit on the boundary between sculpture and craftsmanship: in some works the traits of his concetto spaziale are more recognizable, while others seem to act as a homage to his fascination with Italian baroque.
Massimo De Carlo gallery would like to dedicate Günther Förg/ Lucio Fontana: Bronze/Terracotta to the memory of Günther Förg who sadly passed away on December 5th 2013.