Artempo
Artempo: Where Time Becomes Art[1] was an encyclopedic art exhibition created for the Palazzo Fortuny, Venice in 2007. It examined the relationship between art and time,[2] and the power of display.
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The exhibition included variations of cultures and periods, and featured objects ranging from simple "objecte trouve", archaeological materials, applied art, old, classical, and modern art, to contemporary installations.[3]
The exhibition was made by Mattijs Visser and Axel Vervoordt, together with Jean-Hubert Martin. The accompanying book included essays by philosopher Massimo Cacciari, the curator from Magiciens de la terre, Jean-Hubert Martin, the former director of Centre Georges Pompidou, Heinz-Norbert Jocks, as well as Eddi de Wolf and Visser.[4]
Palazzo Fortuny
Artempo was housed in the Venezian-Gothic Palazzo Fortuny, Mariano Fortuny's former home, studio, showroom, and "Think-Tank". Fortuny's own art ranged across many fields, and he was also an eclectic art-collector, as well as an organizer of lectures, concerts, and discussions. Artempo was designed with the spirit of Fortuny in mind, utilizing the Palazzo as a "Laboratory of Ideas".[4]
In 2009 the Museum Palazzo Fortuny organized a second exhibition, titled In-Finitum, built around the ideas from Fortuny and Artempo.[4]
Artists
Along with objects from different periods and cultures, artists who were on display at Artempo were:[4]
- Marina Abramović
- El Anatsui
- Arman
- Antonin Artaud
- Francis Bacon
- Erzsebet Baerveldt
- Hans Bellmer
- Alighiero Boetti
- Christian Boltanski
- Michael Borremans
- Louise Bourgeois
- André Breton
- Peter Buggenhout
- Alberto Burri
- Cai Guo-Qiang
- Enrico Castellani
- Loris Cecchini
- Tony Cragg
- Yael Davids
- Berlinde De Bruyckere
- Giorgio de Chirico
- Jean Dubuffet
- Marcel Duchamp
- Marlene Dumas
- Jan Fabre
- Robert Filliou
- Fischli & Weiss
- Lucio Fontana
- Mariano Fortuny
- Alberto Giacometti
- Gotthard Graubner
- Thomas Grünfeld
- Gutai
- Anish Kapoor
- On Kawara
- William Kentridge
- Kimsooja
- Yves Klein
- Bertrand Lavier
- Jean-Jacques Lebel
- Man Ray
- Piero Manzoni
- Gordon Matta-Clark
- Marisa Merz
- Sabrine Mezzaqui
- Tatsuo Miyajima
- Jorge Molder
- Sadamasa Motonaga
- Klaus Münch
- Saburo Murakami
- Roman Opalka
- Orlan
- Pablo Picasso
- Otto Piene
- Markus Raetz
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Charles Ross
- Medardo Rosso
- Thomas Ruff
- Claude Rutault
- Richard Serra
- Shozo Shimamoto
- Fujiko Shiraga
- Kazuo Shiraga
- Thomas Schütte
- Curt Stenvert
- Dominique Stroobant
- Shiro Tsujimura
- Antoni Tàpies
- James Turrell
- Günther Uecker
- Emilio Vedova
- Jef Verheyen
- Andy Warhol
- Adolfo Wildt
- Tsuruko Yamazaki
- ZERO
References
- Smith, Roberta (15 August 2007). "Blurring Time and Place in Venice". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
- Time (Tempo in Italian) is a common term for the experience of duration and a fundamental quantity of measuring systems
- "Artempo introduction". Palazzo Fortuny. Archived from the original on December 23, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-26.
- "Artempo press release". Undo.net. Retrieved 2009-10-26.