FAD Magazine

FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

‘MELODRAMA’ is an exhibition in two acts, taking place at Luxembourg & Dayan

‘MELODRAMA’ is an exhibition in two acts, taking place between Luxembourg & Dayan’s London and New York gallery spaces. The show includes seven sculptures and a series of photographs that function as characters in a melodramatic play. Cloaked under commonplace appearances, the works perform dramatic attitudes, generate heightened emotions, and pervade pathos into the gallery space.

Installation View of MELODRAMA: ACT I (left) Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled, 2007. Taxidermied horse. 300 x 170 x 80 cm. Private Collection. (right) Pino Pascali, Coda di Delfino, 1966. Painted canvas stretched on wooden structure. 142 x 66 x 87 cm. Private Collection. Photo: Will Amlot, courtesy Luxembourg & Dayan.
Installation View of MELODRAMA: ACT I (left) Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled, 2007. Taxidermied horse. 300 x 170 x 80 cm. Private Collection. (right) Pino Pascali, Coda di Delfino, 1966. Painted canvas stretched on wooden structure. 142 x 66 x 87 cm. Private Collection. Photo: Will Amlot, courtesy Luxembourg & Dayan.

Act I: London. Pino Pascali’s ‘fake sculpture’ Coda di Delfino (1966) seems to have already escaped the gallery into the wall leaving nothing more than a trace of its tail. Maurizio Cattelan’s Untitled, taxidermied horse (2007) follows Pascali’s dolphin with a leap of its own, into the opposite wall of the gallery. The plot thickens with Fischli & Weiss’s inanimate black rubber Heart (1987), which lies still on a pedestal, hidden and overlooked like a character in one of Beckett’s plays; the show, however, must go on. Finally, a series of meticulous photographs by Franco Vimercati from his Ciclo Zuppiera (1983) generate, as the saying goes, ‘a storm in a tea cup’. These black and white photographs of a soup terrine transform a domestic object into a tragic and melancholic timeless diva.

In New York from 14th July – 17th September, the scene is set with Vincenzo Gemito’s 19th Century bronze bust placed in an unpredictable dialogue with a Jeff Koons cast bronze sculpture. At the same time, Urs Fischer faces a work by Richard Serra, each experimenting with weight and balance – a solid grounding facing precarious uncertainty. End of Act Two.

MELODRAMA was conceived in collaboration with curator Francesco Bonami with the aim to examine structures of exaggerated narratives and performativity in the medium of sculpture. Following the gallery’s recent survey of Alberto Giacometti’s pre-war sculptures in London, and a show of César’s works from the 1960’s in New York, MELODRAMA is the third exhibition in Luxembourg & Dayan’s season of sculptural investigations, a project that traces the blurry line that lies between materiality and imagination in the realm of sculpture.

“The constraints of melodrama can be a great blessing, because they demand that all the characters involved – as absurd and extreme as they may initially seem – must stay utterly rooted in their own reality, or the whole project collapses.”

MELODRAMA Act I: London Luxembourg & Dayan 2 Savile Row, London, W1S 3PA www.luxembourgdayan.com
24th June – 20th August 2016 Opening reception: Thursday 23rd June, 5 – 7 pm

Categories

Tags

Related Posts

Trending Articles

Join the FAD newsletter and get the latest news and articles straight to your inbox

* indicates required