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Emilio Vedova - Scultore (Hardcover)
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Emilio Vedova - Scultore (Hardcover)
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Emilio Vedova's artistic career began in Venice in the mid-1930s.
He immediately felt the deep allure of grand Venetian painting and
sculpture and, guided by the restless agitation and dynamic
mobility of the baroque, was soon plunged into total and extreme
three-dimensional involvement. The work in "Emilio Vedova Scultore"
originates precisely from his feeling of being a living and
breathing part of the beloved spaces he encountered along his way,
inexhaustible sources of stimuli and incitement, which he
transformed into volumetric works of sculpture, architecture, opera
and theatre. In his 1958 exhibition in Warsaw, the geometrical work
mounted on the ceiling of the Zachenta Palace confirms Vedova's
interest in sculpture and his penchant for articulating spatial
implications.
This is followed in 1959 in Venice by the L-shaped teleri in the
painting/ambient of Palazzo Grassi and then by his opera
Intolleranza '60 (Intolerance '60) at the Teatro La Fenice, in
collaboration with Luigi Nono. With the Plurimi (1961-1965),
foreshadowed by the Rilievi (Reliefs, 1960-1964), Vedova removes
the painting from the wall and installs it in the space of a
fragmented, intersected set of surfaces somewhere between painting,
sculpture and architecture. In Berlin he creates the Plurimi of the
Absurdes Berliner Tagebuch '64, which found their natural
development a few years later in Spazio/Plurimo/Luce
(Space/Plurimo/Light), executed for Expo 1967 in Montreal. In this
work, fourteen glass slides produced by the artist on Murano are
projected simultaneously up to a height of 16 metres in the
asymmetrical space by an equal number of large-format projectors.
In 1977-1978, he works on the Plurimi/Binari from his Lacerazione
(Laceration) cycle, where sliding, superimposed surfaces and black
and white paintings squeezed into massive steel frames create
images in continual transformation. In the same period he also
dedicates himself to the Frammenti/Schegge (Fragments/Splinters)
cycle - precarious, solitary and asymmetrical presences - and to
the ... Cosiddetti Carnevali... (... So-called Carnivals...).
Lastly, in the 1980s Vedova began his large installations of the
Dischi (Discs) and Tondi - refound, vital and aggressive
repossessions of space.
This book addresses the artist's entire career as a sculptor and
includes a study of his series of models - his way of taking notes
in three dimensions - which mark out his tireless daily quest for
expression of the total work, towards which Emilio Vedova was
inexorably drawn.
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