MILANO RADICALE

Curated By Radical Intention + Caterina Iaquinta
http://www.radicalintention.wordpress.com/

Milano Radicale is a project curated by Radical Intention in 
collaboration with Caterina Iaquinta that will start in June 2011 and 
will end with an exhibition in 2012. The project intends to start a 
critical reflection on the concept of radicalism and its possible 
contextualization in contemporary art in Milan.

The first step consists in four lectures held by four protagonists of a 
particular artistic production that took place between 1973 and 1979 in 
Milan (Fernando De Filippi, Paolo Rosa, Giovanni Rubino, Roberto 
Taroni). The lecturers will analyze visual and compositional strategies 
in reference to photography, to using slogans and to advertisement, to 
murals and to some aspects of the moving image. The lectures will be 
followed by a group of selected young artists, who will enhance a 
theoretical and practical process during the second phase of the project 
at Corniolo Art Platform (August 2011) by participating in a laboratory 
in which they will experiment and discuss the aftermath of the lectures. 
The project will end with a group show between the end 2011 and the 
beginning of 2012.

The assumption of the project is that the idea of radicalism is to be 
understood as an oppositional behavior and thus as antagonism. During 
the 1970's many artistic processes could be defined as 'radical' mainly 
because they were born in reaction to a power considered as a 'enemy' 
that they intended to overthrow through their actions and because a good 
number of artists could not refrain from discussing their approach to 
social and political emergencies, thus creating discontinuity towards 
uniformed processes of art. Indeed, given some artistic events that have 
taken place in Milan between 1973 and 1979, while promoting art as a 
cultural action and aiming at re-discussing and reconstructing the 
visual codes and space, it is as if over those years the level of 
protest and political engagement was not disconnected from that of the 
artistic and cultural production. This process indicated brought the 
city of Milan to be an example of 'radicalism' in the wider European 
context.

Today, when the artistic action is sometimes alien to the political, art 
does not pursue a 'targeted' antagonism, but a radical 'feeling' is 
still present and radicalism has changed its forms of action.

'Milano Radicale' wants to question which places and which ways, and in 
what kind of artistic practice a radical nature can still be expressed, 
and what are the forms in which this issue occurs. Through a reference 
to the cultural climate of the seventies in Milan, the intent of the 
project is to contribute to an 'update' of the concept of radicalism.

# 1: Lectures
8 | 15 | 22 | 29 June 2011 | 7 pm
Medionauta | Via Confalonieri 2 | Milan

Through the involvement of some of the key figures in the artistic and 
cultural scene in Milan such as Fernando De Filippi, Paolo Rosa, 
Giovanni Rubino, and Roberto Taroni, the Milano Radicale project 
enhances a series of conferences in which the speakers will be invited 
to comment, analyze and discuss together with artists selected for the 
residency and the audience, some visual works they produced or 
collaborated on during the seventies. The intent here is to re-examine 
methods and strategies that often occurred in artistic practices during 
that time, in order to reflect on the image, used here as a pretext to 
explore the legacy of those years in artistic and cultural production today.

 > Paul Rosa - June 8, at 7 pm
Paolo Rosa along with Tullio Brunone, Giovanni Columbu, Claudio Guenzani 
and Ettore Pasculli, was a member of the Laboratorio di Comunicazione 
Militante, a group that was active from 1975 to 1979, and in 1976 they 
occupied the Church of San Carpoforo in Milan, transforming it into a 
self-organized cultural center called la Fabbrica di Comunicazione 
Militante. Thanks to the exhibition 'Strategia d'informazione' ' 
(Rotonda della Besana, Milan, 1976, Casa del Mantegna, Mantova, 1977), 
the Laboratory would call into question the power of mass media images, 
subjecting them to a real process of 'deconstruction': framing, 
lighting, the use of screening, staging the subjects were all recombined 
actions that revealed the fallacy of visual quality. The video, Facce di 
festa, filmed in 1980 – a reflection on a lost youth in search for new 
references – marked the dissolution of the group and the birth of 
Studio Azzurro, a group founded in 1982 by Paolo Rosa, Fabio Cirifino 
and Leonardo Sangiorgi.

 > Roberto Taroni - June 15, at 7 pm
Roberto Taroni founded Sixto Notes in 1977. In 1981 he created and 
organized, 'Sonorità Prospettiche' an exhibition on the relationship 
between sound and environment. His works have been presented in 
international events like the Venice Biennale, the 'International Week 
of Performance' of Bologna, the 'Symposium Internationale d'Art 
Performance' in Lyon, 'Forum '80' in Middelburg, 'Anni '90' in Bologna, 
'Italian Art 1960-1982' in London and in private galleries and in 
international museums such as the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the 
Koelnischer Kunstverein in Cologne, the Folkwang Museum in Essen, the 
ELAC of Lyon, Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus, the National 
Gallery of Modern Art in Rome and the PAC in Milan. He is a protagonist 
of International Performance and Video Art of the late '70s, he built 
his artistic exhibitions, installations, environments, performances and 
videos, which constantly created a relation between Visual Arts and 
other artistic disciplines.

 > Fernando De Filippi - June 22, at 7 pm
Fernando De Filippi held the course of special graphic techniques 
between 1973 and 1980 at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera (Milan); 
the students formed a collective and helped the challenge of the 
seventies movement by conceiving most of the icons and printing the 
slogans used in demonstrations throughout those years in Milan. He has 
participated in numerous exhibitions, including 'Testuale. Le parole e 
le immagini' (Milan, 1979), during which he placed banners and posters 
that represented extracts from Writings on Art by Marx and other 
writings by De Filippi himself, throughout the city. He also 
participated in the Venice Biennale in 1970, 1972, 1976, 1978 and 1980 
and in the Quadrennial in Rome in 1965, 1972 and 1986. It was also Dean 
of the Accademia di Brera.

 > Giovanni Rubino - June 29, at 7 pm
Giovanni Rubino was a catalyst figure amongst those from the Collettivo 
Autonomo Pittori di Porta Ticinese. He organized numerous exhibitions 
and events in public spaces, including the 'Mostra incessante per il 
Cile' (Milan, 1973-76): the show started after the coup of Pinochet and 
represented the greatest moment of participation to the Collettivo di 
Porta Ticinese and saw a succession of several interventions, mainly in 
Gigliola Rovasino's Galleria di Porta Ticinese, until its final act at 
the Rotonda della Besana in 1977. He also organized the exhibition / 
conference 'Un po' poetico, un po' politico' (Milan, Italy / Pavia, 
1979), which by referring specifically to the 'poetic' sphere, it 
reflected on the theme of political defeat and the figure of the 
'artist-hero' that will mark the art in the Eighties. In 1976 he 
participated in the Italian section of the Venice Biennale dedicated to 
'Ambiente come sociale', curated by Enrico Crispolti.

Caterina Iaquinta lives and works in Milan ad she is PhD candidate in 
Philosophy, Art and Theatre at the Cattolica University of Milan, with a 
research project aimed to investigate the theoretical, critical and 
historical prospects of performative practices, in particular relation 
with social action and experimental theater, with a focus on the Italian 
scene from 1975 to 1980. In these past years she has addressed the 
relationship between artistic production, feminism and the social 
context in the seventies. She is currently collaborating with the 
Department of Visual Arts at NABA – Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti di 
Milano. As a curator, she developed exhibition projects including 
Dissertare/Disertare (2006) and La Forza dei Legami Deboli (2008), 
developed with the involvement of a network of curators and Italian no 
profit realities.
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