FAUSTO MELOTTI (1901-1986)
FAUSTO MELOTTI (1901-1986)
FAUSTO MELOTTI (1901-1986)
FAUSTO MELOTTI (1901-1986)
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FAUSTO MELOTTI (1901-1986)

Notturno alle Haway (Nocturne in Haway)

細節
FAUSTO MELOTTI (1901-1986)
Notturno alle Haway (Nocturne in Haway)
brass and copper
41 3/8 x 27 1/8 x 8 5/8in. (105 x 69 x 22cm.)
Executed in 1976
來源
Private Collection, Milan.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
出版
G. Celant, Melotti. Catalogo generale, Milan 1994, vol. I, no. 1976 1 (illustrated, p. 435).
www.fondazionefaustomelotti.org/catalogo/1976-1 (illustrated in colour).
展覽
Milan, Palazzo della Permanente, XXIX Biennale nazionale d'arte città di Milano, 1984, no. 190 (illustrated with incorrect title and date, unpaged); no. 190 (p. 238).
注意事項
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

榮譽呈獻

Barbara Guidotti
Barbara Guidotti

拍品專文

Created in 1976, Notturno alle Haway is an elegant example of the growing complexity of Fausto Melotti’s sculpture as he entered the second phase of his artistic career, following a period of creative silence caused by the trauma of the Second World War. Spurred by the emergence of a new generation of Italian artists intent on subverting classical notions of sculpture and painting, Melotti began to explore his pre-war experiments in abstraction once again, playing with the materiality of his constructions and pushing the whimsical and poetic dimensions of his work to new levels. Over the course of the 1960s and 70s he developed a unique sculptural language, which resulted in the creation of a series of beautifully ordered, precise yet lyrical metal sculptures built from thin sheets and delicate threads of brass, gold and steel.

Melotti saw a completely new aesthetic potential in these dynamic materials: ‘I use metal because it brings me close to drawing: with metal I can draw in space,’ the artist explained (F. Melotti, quoted in Melotti, exh. cat., Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna, Rome, 1983, p. 10). Eschewing the weighty presence and promise of durability denoted by traditional sculpture, he instead embraced a distinct lightness in these works – the brass is thinned to spindly threads, slender panels and sheer, willowy stretches of mesh, which quiver and shine with an apparent weightlessness while still retaining their essential tensile strength. In Notturno alle Haway the artist plays with the contrasting textures of these materials, juxtaposing a long, diaphanous strip of metallic fabric suspended between two thin pylons against the smooth sensuousness of the sheet of polished brass arrows below.

While the title of the sculpture conjures images of a night-time ritual or procession in the unique landscape of Hawaii, the sculpture itself most likely took shape independently from any narrative intention. Instead, it is a composition built on suggestions and allusions alone, animated by the imagination of the viewer as they encounter it. As Melotti so eloquently stated: ‘Imagination offers the artwork the start of the adventure. And invention’s inspiration is alive, like in the waves, in the ebb and flow’ (F. Melotti, quoted in Fausto Melotti, exh. cat., Acquavella Galleries, New York, 2008, p. 42). While the narrative of Notturno alle Haway remains teasingly mysterious, its elegant curves and shimmering planes are nonetheless captivating, and can be spotted in a scene from Luca Guadagnino’s 2009 film, Io sono lamore (I am Love).

更多來自 意大利思潮:藝術與設計

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