Art

Art – Novecento mai visto, From Albers to Warhol to (now)

On March 7th, I went to the Santa Giulia Museum in Brescia for the press-preview of the exhibition “Novecento mai visto: From Albers to Warhol to (now)” that until June 30, brings for the first time in Italy 230 works from the private collection of the historic German automotive group Daimler.
 
 
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Michael Sailstorfer, C111, 2011
Michael Sailstorfer, C111, 2011

Renate Wiehager, curator and director of the Daimler Art Collection, guided us through the most significant works of the 2000-pieces-collection, ranging from 1909 to the present days.
Daimler is the only company in the world to have a private art collection of this kind.
The collection was born in 1977 as a way to educate the employees to the contemporary art, putting the works in the common areas of every Daimler venue, but since 1999 this opportunity has been given even to the public with the opening of the Haus Huth in Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, a sort of Daimler art gallery. The works are also exported in exhibitions around the world, and today are finally in Italy for the first time thanks to the twinning between the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart and the Mille Miglia Museum of Brescia. In this way Mercedes-Benz Italia emphasized the shared passion for automotive culture and confirmed the commitment of going beyond the commercial vocation, organizing specific art-education programs for the children and students of Brescia region.
 
 
Renate Wiehager curator of Daimler Art Collection
Renate Wiehager curator of Daimler Art Collection (right)
 
 
The exhibition begins with the first group of works collected in 1977 and related to Classic Modernism, with important works of the Bauhaus;
 
 
Novecento mai visto: Capolavori dalla Daimler Art Collection - Room1
Novecento mai visto: Capolavori dalla Daimler Art Collection – Room 1
 
 
The second part is dedicated to the ZERO European avant-garde, the movement founded in 1957 by Heinz Mack and Otto Piene, that redefined the traditional concept of work of art, setting the stage for the Conceptual Art and Minimalism, treated in the third section of the exhibition.
 
 
Novecento mai visto: Capolavori dalla Daimler Art Collection - Room2
Novecento mai visto: Capolavori dalla Daimler Art Collection – Room 2
Novecento mai visto: Capolavori dalla Daimler Art Collection - Room2
Novecento mai visto: Capolavori dalla Daimler Art Collection – Room2
 
 
In the spaces dedicated to contemporary art we find important movements such as: Conceptual Art, founded more on the thoughts and ideas provoked by the works, rather than on the aesthetic pleasure;
the Ready-made, which transforms everyday life objects into works of art (from Marcel Duchamp’s fountain(urinal), to Warhol-Campbell’s soup); and, finally, the New Media Art, including photography, video and multimedia installations, focused on political and cultural issues of the contemporary society.
 
 
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Pietro Sanguineti, Void, 2010
Pietro Sanguineti, Void, 2010
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Natalia Stachon, Zoning 04, 2011
Natalia Stachon, Zoning 04, 2011
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Daniel Buren, Ein Tanz mit einem Quadrat N°47 C, 1989
Daniel Buren, Ein Tanz mit einem Quadrat N°47 C, 1989
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Philippe Parreno, Marquée, 2009
Philippe Parreno, Marquée, 2009
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Eckhard Schene, Trophy III/69, 1969
Eckhard Schene, Trophy III/69, 1969 
Ulrike Rosenbach, Art as a criminal action, 1972/1996
Ulrike Rosenbach, Art as a criminal action, 1972/1996
 
 
The final section is dedicated to the commissioned works by the Daimler house on the subject of motoring. The Cars series by Andy Warhol is definitely the most famous piece, held to mark the 100th anniversary of the invention of the car, and for which were planned 80 works, but only 35 images and 12 drawings were completed before the artist’s death in 1987.
 
 
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Andy Warhol, Cars, 1986
Andy Warhol, Cars, 1986
 
 
Among the other art works I was particularly impressed by the Swiss artist Sylvie Fleury and her series of 3-channel-projections especially made for the opening of the Mercedes-Benz Center in Paris. She mixed the charm of fashion and the legendary Mercedes-Benz cars, taking beautiful models inside the Mercedes-Benz maintenance and restoration workshop. I liked even her ready-made work called Aura Soma (2002), a small light-boxes-shelf on which there are 102 bottles of 50ml of colored oil and water developed by the Aura Soma holistic therapies of Vicky Wall (80s).
 
 
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Swiss Polish Meditation, 2005
Sylvie Fleury, Swiss Polish Meditation, 2005
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Cosmic atelier 2005
Sylvie Fleury, Cosmic atelier 2005
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Sylvie Fleury, Aura Soma, 2002
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Sylvie Fleury, Current issues, 1994
Sylvie Fleury, Current issues, 1994
 
 
The Daimler Art Collection exhibition is intertwined with another one titled “Novecento mai visto: works from the collections of Brescia. From de Chirico to Cattelan and beyond“, curated by Elena Lucchesi Ragni and dedicated to the Italian art of the twentieth century with the pieces kept in the storage of the old gallery of modern and contemporary art of Brescia, closed in the 70s and never reopened.
In this exhibition I discovered the curious figure of the collector and dadaist inspired artis Guglielmo Achille Cavellini. An extravegant genius who in 1971 coined the term “auto-storicizzazione”: a way to auto-promote the artist through the writing of a wide and imaginative autobiography to be published in the Treccani encyclopedia, re-proposed on clothes and art objects.
 
 
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, Dalla pagina dell'Enciclopedia, armadio e abiti, 1973/1975
Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, Dalla pagina dell’Enciclopedia, armadio e abiti, 1973/1975  
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, Dalla pagina dell'Enciclopedia, armadio e abiti, 1973/1975
Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, Dalla pagina dell’Enciclopedia, armadio e abiti, 1973/1975  
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, Dalla pagina dell'Enciclopedia, armadio e abiti, 1973/1975
Guglielmo Achille Cavellini, Dalla pagina dell’Enciclopedia, armadio e abiti, 1973/1975  
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Piero Manzoni, Merda d'artista 079, 1961
Piero Manzoni, Merda d’artista n°079 (Artist’s shit), 1961
 
 
The special setting of the exhibition allows the unusual dialogue between the works of contemporary Italian artists and the ages that characterize the historical layers of the museum: from the Benedictine nunnery wanted by the Lombard king Desiderio in 753, to the remains of Roman domus preserved in the cellar of the monastery itself, as well as the related archaeological finds such as mosaics and bronze statues.
 
 
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Rupert Norfolk, Untitled, 2007
Rupert Norfolk, Untitled, 2007 next to the Roman mosaics
Novecento mai visto - Brescia - Daimler Art Collection - Andreas Schmid, Lichtungen, 2009
Andreas Schmid, Lichtungen, 2009 inside the crypt of San Salvatore church
 
 
The visit to the exhibitions is a real journey through the history of Brescia, a unique industrial town of the northern Italy, recently declared as a UNESCO World Heritage site, that has an impressive tourist potential, but unfortunately still unknown to most people.
 
 
Brescia - Capitolium
Brescia – Capitolium 
 
Alessandro Masetti – The Fashion Commentator
 
Special thanks to Mercedes-Benz Italia

Italian architect into fashion. Art curator in love with books, flea markets and interior design.

16 Comments on “Art – Novecento mai visto, From Albers to Warhol to (now)

    1. Ciao Silvia!
      Io sono rimasto sconvolto dalla bellezza del centro storico di Brescia, non facevo in tempo a girarmi che scoprivo scavi romani, piazze rinascimentali, una barocca e addirittura quella realizzata nel XX secolo in pieno stile fascista rifacendosi ai principi del foro romano. Ti giuro una piazza più bella dell’altra. L’ultima volta ci sono stato 7 anni fa, non me la ricordavo affatto così bella!!! Un vero peccato che non sia valorizzata a dovere!

  1. ciao Alessandro ,

    purtroppo la mia cultura nel campo dell’ arte è molto limitata , non riesco quindi a valutare perchè assolutamente sprovvista di un background che mi faccia apprezzare i vari passaggi e collegamenti storici e artistici, nonostante ciò le fotografie che hai pubblicato e quanto hai scritto hanno acceso anche in me un lampo di curiosità e interesse .
    L’ambientazione è stupenda , post interessante e di spessore come ormai ci aspettiamo da te

    ave

    1. Ciao Ave,
      ti assicuro che l’arte (soprattutto quella contemporanea) è l’unico mezzo d’espressione che non ha bisogno di interpretazione perché è un dialogo tra l’oggetto e chi lo guarda. Certo i vari critici devono spiegarti l’opera storicizzandola e contestualizzandola, ma spesso gli stessi artisti non sanno spiegare il “perché” delle loro opere!
      E poi ne vale davvero la pena per visitare la città!!!
      😉

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