Fondazione Merz: 2016 Exhibition Programme
The first exhibition of 2016 at Fondazione Merz, “Botto&Bruno. Society, you’re a crazy breed”, opens on the 9th of March. The Foundation has announced the other upcoming exhibitions of the year.
Mario Merz. Nature and balance
July 4–September 25, 2016
The Foundation is dedicating an entire exhibition to a selection of Mario Merz’s works carefully chosen due to their profound association with the natural world. This theme was not unusual for the artist and it was certainly never far from his thoughts, both in his private life and in his art.
The show follows the Foundation’s inaugural exhibition in 2005, and subsequent shows on drawings (2007), paintings (2010), architectural designs (2011), and several held in collaboration with other museums. The selection is to include paintings, installations and drawings, where the artist focuses on a more poetic and social view of the earth as the creator of life.
Taking our cue from art, and with the help of music, we intend to offer reflections on our concept of the future with regards the extent to which man’s presence on the planet is sustainable.
The show will be accompanied by a programme of concerts entitled Songlines. The music will concentrate specifically on the South Pacific, where artistic traditions blend with a sensibility towards nature in a way that still seems strange for Europeans.
Wael Shawky
Winner of the first edition of the Mario Merz Prize
Exhibition at the Merz Foundation, Turin
November 3, 2016–February 5, 2017
Curated by Abdellah Karroum
This site-specific exhibition by Wael Shawky is based on Al Araba Al Madfuna, a film trilogy inspired by Mohammed Mostajab’s novels Dayrout Al Sharif. The trilogy was shot in the Egyptian village of the same name with Shawky filming the third part in the ancient Abydos temple, which is connected to Al Araba Al Madfuna village via an underground passage. The exhibition at the Merz Foundation, which features the installations of the Al Araba Al Madfuna series, drawings, and large installations, fills the entire space of the foundation, including its exterior areas. Together with the screenings, architectural models and set designs specially created for the exhibition generate an original atmosphere inspired by the historical, literary and cinematographic references from which the artist constructed his stories. An artist’s book accompanies the exhibition.
Wael Shawky is the winner of the first edition of the Mario Merz Prize, an international art and music prize awarded biennially. The visitors’ vote was supplemented by that of the jury, composed of Manuel Borja-Villel, Massimiliano Gioni, Beatrice Merz and Lawrence Weiner, who gave the following grounds for their decision: “In spite of the excellent contributions provided by the 5 finalists, in terms of quality, deep conceptual approach and precision of the medium used, we have found Wael Shawky’s stance to best meet the scope of this project. His work combines thematic richness, the ability to mingle sometimes intractable issues and their effective depiction, the use of film as language and a surprisingly innovative and contemporary narrative technique. Through his evocative poetic language, studied settings, thoughtful reflections on tradition, courage to eschew a Western perspective to remain in Egypt and relate the great history of the Arab world and the Middle East as a whole, Shawky has shown himself to be an artist with a wealth of inspiration. His approach relies more on the language of art to show the contradictions that emerge in the engagement between distant cultures and religious faiths than on the literal historical relevance of the events described. In this respect, Wael Shawky’s is the perfect representation of a generation’s specific point of view and as such deserves the award, enabling him to present a new project in a solo exhibition.”
Complementing the exhibition at the Merz Foundation is a retrospective of the artist’s work, curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev and Marcella Beccaria, at the Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea.