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Eliseo Mattiacci: Sculpture in Action in Rome is a fresh
examination of the developments in Mattiacci's sculpture from the
mid-1960s to the mid-1980s, dates that embrace the two decades he
spent living and working in Italy's vibrant capital. New research
by the contributors to this book reveal how the exceptional
constellation of studios, galleries and institutional spaces as
well as the architectural and landscape settings Rome offered were
the crucial factor in Mattiacci's rapid sophistication as an
artist. In the mid-1960s the city was already a major centre for
art, literature, theatre and cinema, and the setting for numerous
avant-garde performative 'actions' and 'happenings'. The Piazza del
Popolo district was crowded with bars and galleries, and Mattiacci
soon became warmly acquainted with various gallerists and artists,
including the Arte Povera practitioners Jannis Kounellis and Pino
Pascali. In this challenging and competitive environment Mattiacci
sought to establish his own distinctive exploratory style,
investigating materials, forms, sounds, presentations and actions
in endlessly novel and inventive ways. The extraordinary Tubo, the
long flexible yellow coil of metallic tubing that could be
endlessly rearranged and even carried out of a gallery into the
streets by files of admirers, was first exhibited in 1967, and made
his name. The following year he staged Lavori in corso, a trio of
very popular performances, in the Circo Massimo, which involved
spinning huge umbrellas in imitation of the Earth's rotations and
revolutions. Percorso, in 1969, was Mattiacci again in action, this
time driving a noisy roadroller into and around a gallery. In the
1970s - a difficult decade of political violence in Italy -
Mattiacci continued to explore both outwardly and inwardly. He was
increasingly fascinated by archaeology, antique alphabets and
non-literate cultures, notably the USA's First Peoples, and he
created actions and presentations that ranged from exhibitions of
x-rays of his own inner organs to appearances encased in
'bandaging' and plaster. In 1981 he first showed the admired Roma,
a collection of 50 large sinuous metal shapes inspired by the
volutes of classical and Baroque architecture, once again an
artwork that is endlessly rearrangeable, indoors or out. Sculpture
in Action is the beautifully illustrated account of Mattiacci's
artistic creativity in those decades.
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