Marina Apollonio. Beyond the circle.
Marsilio
Venezia, Collezione Peggy Guggenheim, October 12, 2024 - March 3, 2025.
Edited by Gelussi M.
English Text.
Venezia, 2024; bound, pp. 208, col. ill., cm 20,5x26,5.
Edizione italiana 9791254632338.
EAN13: 9791254632345
Subject: Collections,Essays (Art or Architecture),Graphic Arts (Prints, Drawings, Engravings, Miniatures),Monographs (Painting and Drawing)
Period: 1960- Contemporary Period
Languages:
Weight: 0.9 kg
Organized by independent art historian and curator Marianna Gelussi, the exhibition features approximately one hundred works on loan from the artist's collection, as well as from national and international museums, including the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea in Rome, the Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea in Turin, MART in Rovereto, the Neue Gallery in Graz, the Kunsthalle Recklinghausen and Ritter Museum of Waldenbuch, Germany, the Museum Haus Konstruktiv in Zurich, and Fondation Villa Datris de l'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, France. Marina Apollonio: Beyond the Circle is a deserved tribute to the Triestine artist, tracing her career from 1963 to the present. The show highlights her rigorous visual investigations, encompassing painting, sculpture, drawing, as well as static, moving, and environmental works, black and white paintings, chromatic experimentations, and a variety of media and techniques.
This homage in the galleries of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, Apollonio's adoptive city, where she lived as a girl and took her first steps as an artist, is particularly fitting, as it also highlights the role of visionary collector Peggy Guggenheim in her career. Indeed, in 1968, after having visited the artist's solo exhibition at the Galleria Barozzi in Venice, Guggenheim commissioned Relief no. 505 (ca. 1968), currently part of the museum's collection, which testifies to her support of young Italian avant-garde artists. The exhibition follows other exhibitions organized by the Peggy Guggenheim Collection devoted to Italian postwar artists supported by the U.S. patron, including Edmondo Bacci and his recent retrospective, and Tancredi Parmeggiani.