La mia piccola cucina
Illustrations by Soledad.
Translation by Marzano G.
Milano, 2009; paperback, pp. 359, ill., cm 21,5x26,5.
cover price: € 29.90
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Books included in the offer:
La mia piccola cucina
Illustrations by Soledad.
Translation by Marzano G.
Milano, 2009; paperback, pp. 359, ill., cm 21,5x26,5.
FREE (cover price: € 29.90)
Torte in fiore. Raffinate creazioni floreali in pasta di zucchero
Translation by Destro P. and Tosi L.
Milano, 2014; clothbound, pp. 224, ill., cm 25x29.
(Gli Illustrati).
FREE (cover price: € 35.00)
Orticola di Lombardia. 150 anni di associazione, 20 anni di mostra
Edited by Pizzoni F.
Milano, 2016; bound, pp. 279, ill., cm 24,5x24,5.
FREE (cover price: € 35.00)
Arturo Martini. I capolavori
Treviso, Museo “luigi Bailo”, March 31 - July 30, 2023.
Edited by Stringa Nico and Fabrizio Malachin.
Cornuda, 2023; paperback, pp. 278, col. ill., cm 23x29.
FREE (cover price: € 33.00)
Barry McGee. [Edizione Italiana]
Germano Celant
Fondazione Prada
Translation by Stanton D.
Milano, 2002; paperback, pp. 336, col. ill., cm 15,5x24.
ISBN: 88-87029-22-9 - EAN13: 9788887029222
Subject: Essays (Art or Architecture),Graphic Arts (Prints, Drawings, Engravings, Miniatures),Monographs (Painting and Drawing)
Period: 1960- Contemporary Period
Languages:
Weight: 1.61 kg
This is a world rich in signs and symbols that contain references to life in today?s cities and are linked to images of American culture ? such as the large, enigmatic figure of a Native American painted upside down on a wall made of rusty iron sheets. As in the aftermath of a road accident, two abandoned vehicles invade the space. On their bodies the artist has painted his familiar faces, which, with their sad eyes, are a reminder of bowed, resigned humanity. ?The presence of this male figure is kind of like this everyman, and it?s very specific to San Francisco, where there?s a huge homeless population that everyone wants to be free of [?]. The subject is to do with graffiti and the homeless? kind of like an outcast, things that the city is trying to get rid of, or trying to hide, or pretending doesn?t exist.?* On the walls, the dominant colour is red. This refers to a detail of the urban environment that has inspired the artist: ?In Chinatown in San Francisco the doors are painted red. They are great surfaces, they attract me a lot. Red is the colour of life.?* Innumerable drawings appear on all the walls, following each other without a gap.
Here the rapid gesture is interwoven with a clear, delicate line that depicts a world of images realized with a wide range of techniques (enamel, acrylics, spray paint, chalk and pencil): the result is a veritable crowd of human faces. Dominating the white space is a huge male figure with a childlike face: wearing black pants and a lightcoloured shirt, it has the severity and majesty of the Mexican murals.
The intensity of the installation is reinforced by the presence of a bunches liquor bottles, used by McGee as supports for his paintings, together with a large number of miscellaneous multicoloured objects such as painted cases, road signs, table napkins, dry leaves, shop signs, panels, cast-off clothes and small drawings by the artist and by people dear to him.