Turin Lights UpBy Aoife Rosenmeyer
Published: November 3, 2008
The city’s big annual art week kicks off November 4 when this year’s edition of the popular Luci d’Artista light-art project will be illuminated. Later in the week, the second edition of the Turin Triennale (November 6, 2008 – February 1, 2009), and the Artissima art fair (November 7–9) open. Luci d’Artista was born in 1998, when the Turin city council responded to lobbying from retailers to improve the urban environment over the winter months, mindful that they were to host the Winter Olympics in 2006. Italian and international artists were invited to create works in light all over the city, a collection that each winter is re-installed and added to, now involving 19 artists. The city becomes a canvas for stunning pieces, which not only improve the appearance of dark streets, but also stimulate tourism and trade, and have even been credited with improving community relations in poorer neighborhoods. Highlights include Daniel Buren’s Tappeto volante, a glowing “flying carpet” of red and blue cubes installed above the historic piazza Palazzo di Città; Mario Merz's Il volo dei numeri, which scales the side of Turin’s best-known landmark the Mole Antonelliana; and Rebecca Horn’s Piccoli Spiriti Blu, a series of ethereal blue circles that hover around the Monte dei Cappuccini church and can be seen across the Po River from the city center. This year’s new works, which remain firmly under wraps until the opening, are from Milanese artist Alberto De Braud and theater director Franco Gervasio. The Turin Triennale was initiated in 2005 as an international art event to boost the city’s cultural offerings. The curator for this year’s sophomore effort is Daniel Birnbaum, who is also directing the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009. His show, titled "50 Moons of Saturn," comprises solo exhibitions by Olafur Eliasson and Paul Chan that will be orbited by a group show of 48 other international artists who have not yet reached the same stellar status but are well on their way, including Gerard Byrne, Ceal Floyer, and Tomas Saraceno. The triennial exhibitions span three venues: the Castello di Rivoli just outside the city; the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo; and the Palazzina della Società Promotrice delle Belle Arti. Were there a competition for the most stunning museum in Europe, the Castello di Rivoli would certainly make the shortlist. Located atop a hill in Rivoli, a town nine miles outside Turin, the Castello overlooks a plain with an ancient Roman road to the city. The Castello is part medieval fortress, part unfinished 18th-century addition, part stylish contemporary renovation into an art museum, which was completed by Andrea Bruno in 1995. During the triennale, the Castello will host the Eliasson exhibition and part of the group show of the other artists. Some of the institution’s permanent collection, known for edgy installations such as Maurizio Cattelan’s Novocento, a stuffed horse suspended from the ceiling of the baroque gallery, will also be on view. The triennale’s second site, the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, epitomizes the recent enthusiasm for and investment in contemporary art in Turin. Founded in 1995 by Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, who had begun collecting art seriously only a few years earlier, the private non-profit foundation foundation comprises two venues: the Re Rebaudengo family’s 18th-century pallazo in Guarene d'Alba, a village outside Turin, and a newer gallery, designed by Claudio Silvestrin and opened in 2002, where Francesco Bonami, who curated the first triennale in 2005, is artistic director. For this year’s edition, the Fondazione is hosting the Chan exhibition as well as part of the group show. In the unlikely event that your appetite for art is not sated here, another Turin gem, the Fondazione (Mario) Merz, which has a significant Matthew Barney show on until January 11, 2009, is just a few blocks away. The triennale’s third venue, the Palazzina della Società Promotrice delle Belle Arti, a handsome 19th-century exhibition building in the Parco del Valentino (which is also home to the Castello Valentino, a former residence of the House of Savoy), hosts the remaining artists in the group exhibition. Before the Luci d'Artista and the triennial, Turin’s fall art season was dominated by the Artissima art fair. Now in its 15th edition, the event, like its host city, has not always had an easy go of things. Several years ago sales were falling, and Artissima did not seem to be coping with increased competition from other European fairs. But the local museums authority took control and appointed a new director, mindful of the fair’s importance to the north Italian cultural economy. Italian art historian and curator Andrea Bellini, until recently an editor at Flash Art International in New York, has been in charge since early 2007. As he did with his first effort last year, for the 2008 edition, he will concentrate on younger and emerging artists and galleries, ensuring quality by reducing the number of participants. Key sections include “Present Future” — 17 solo artist shows presented by galleries and selected by a curatorial panel — and “New Entries,” a forum for galleries younger than five years old, such as London’s Dicksmith Gallery, Zürich’s Freymond-Guth & Co., and James Fuentes LLC from New York. There are also sections devoted to video and sculpture, and a program of seminars and talks curated by Stéphanie Moisdon, former curator of Manifesta and the Lyon Bienniale. |
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