Giuseppe Penone (b. 1947)
Giuseppe Penone (b. 1947)

Pelle di Marmo e Spine d'acacia-Nora

Details
Giuseppe Penone (b. 1947)
Pelle di Marmo e Spine d'acacia-Nora
signed, titled and dated 'Pelle di Marmo e Spine d'acacia NORA Giuseppe Penone 2005' (on the reverse of the right element); titled again 'NORA' (on the reverse of the left element)
diptych—pink marble and acacia thorns on silk laid down on canvas
each: 39 3/8 x 39 3/8 in. (100 x 100 cm.)
overall: 39 3/8 x 78 ¾ in. (100 x 200 cm.)
Executed in 2005.
Provenance
Haunch of Venison, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner

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Rachael White
Rachael White

Lot Essay

Giuseppe Penone’s Pelle di Marmo e Spine dacacia-Nora—an evocative diptych comprised of a slab of pink marble alongside a canvas adorned with silk and an array of delicate but sharp acacia thorns—combines the traditional with the modern. His interest in the inherent qualities of his materials references the ideology of his arte povera contemporaries, such as Giovanni Anselmo and Jannis Kounellis, yet with his use of marble this work also sings to an even larger narrative: that of Michelangelo and Gian Lorenzo Bernini, and the great Italian artists who worked over half a millennium before.

Penone infuses his sharp and angular canvases with the soft ripples inherent to the surfaces found in nature such as skin, tree bark, or rock formations. In this work, the left canvas features the pink undulations of the surface of marble to create a beautiful and ponderous effect. The right canvas mimics the left as thorns, which Penone has pricked into a silk-laid canvas, run diagonally through our field of vision and repeat the aesthetic of the marble.

By his astute use of materials Penone combines the ancient and modern traditions of his home country. A central figure of the arte povera movement, he conflates history into singular moments in time. This work speaks specifically to the great legacy of the Renaissance by making marble the subject of Pelle di Marmo e Spine dacacia-Nora. As such the work is ultimately a love-letter to the artist’s rich cultural heritage and calls to humanity with the gentle undulations that gracefully ripple throughout the work.

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