Informazioni Evento

Luogo
TUBE CULTURE HALL
Piazza XXV Aprile , Milano, Italia
(Clicca qui per la mappa)
Date
Dal al

Tuesday - Friday
3 - 7 pm
Saturday by appointment only

Vernissage
16/11/2022

ore 18

Generi
arte contemporanea, collettiva

Mostra collettiva.

Comunicato stampa

Tube Culture Hall is pleased to announce Somewhere in Time, a group show of Dante Cannatella, Diane Chappalley, Whit Harris and Soko, curated by Sabrina Andres.

From the critical text by Sabrina Andres:

Somewhere in Time celebrates each artists’ curiosity and exploration into both the personal and historical elements that are often present in the medium of painting. The exhibition title refers to a place in time, without saying where and when. The agency of this show is to transcend these fixed realities by fusing the past and the present into a single dimension.

For centuries artists have looked to preceding masters for inspiration to explore new possibilities within their practices.

For this occasion each participating artist has carefully chosen a masterwork as a point of departure for new dialogues to be had. These works span from early renaissance, baroque, and modernism, covering some of the most important epoques of art history.

Through playful re-investigation of shape, color, proportion, composition and storyline, the artists’ shared interest in nature, psychology and mythology is newly explored.

The resulting paintings in Somewhere in Time reference masterpieces by Piero della Francesca, Peter Paul Rubens, Ferdinand Hodler and Henri Matisse, encouraging viewers to critically engage with their pre-existing ideas about the acclaimed paintings in unexpected news ways.

Somewhere in Time shares insight into each artists’ psyche, and reveals the dualities that inspire their artwork ranging from the real vs. surreal, spirituality vs. bodily, arcadian vs. urban, and subconscious vs. conscious. Dreamy symbols like flowers, skulls, lush lawns, and fantastical female figures are juxtaposed with ethereal abstract gestures. Together they behave like a pendulum: when one sphere is lifted and released, it strikes all the consecutive spheres, moving energy swiftly from the past to the present, and onward.