Terre a fuoco
Cloisters of San Domenico
6th May - 12th June 2011 in collaboration with MAXXI-Architettura curated by Sandro Parmiggiani project realized by Casalgrande Padana TERRE A FUOCOTo celebrate its fifty years in business in 2010, Casalgrande Padana, a major company in the ceramic industry, commissioned the three leading photographers Franco Fontana, Michael Kenna and Ferdinando Scianna to revisit and document creatively various stages of the journey that starts from the extraction of raw materials in a cave or the gathering of pebbles on a beach and, primarily through the action of firing, culminates in the production of a tile, which will then go on to inhabit every corner of the world. The results of their work, documented in the volume published by Skira and edited by Sandro Parmiggiani, are presented at this exhibit by Fotografia Europea 2011. The sixty images on display (twenty from each of the photographers) confirm how misleading and “ideological” certain argumentations on the commissioning of artworks can be when they state that commissioning deprives artists of creative freedom and stifles their inventiveness. The images produced by the three photographers demonstrate how empty these claims are: those of Michael Kenna (born in Widnes, England, in 1953), taken in some of Europe’s quarries where the materials are extracted for the manufacturing of tiles, which going through ports like Ravenna, eventually reach the facilities of Casalgrande Padana, where they acquire the form of a ceramic product; those of Ferdinando Scianna (born in Bagheria, in 1943), taken inside the main manufacturing plant, in the surrounding yards overflowing with tiles ready to take off on their journey around the world, and finally in the offices, revealing the identity of the individuals who make the company thrive and are its vital hub; and those of Franco Fontana (born in Modena, in 1933) taken in the meanders of the plant, pursuing flashes of colour and subtle, recurring geometric features that seem to pervade everything. The “constraint” which all three photographers have had to reckon with, has made them give their best and boost the characteristics of their own language (Kenna, Scianna) or innovate them (Fontana’s images are striking for the freshness of his perspective, pure and ready to capture the new which he comes across). The experience of the three photographers ultimately seems to confirm Ferdinando Scianna's recent comment during a conversation with Giuseppe Tornatore, when he said that “When you're working for a client, you often find something that suits you much more than what you'd be able to find if you were working for yourself.” BIOGRAPHIESStanislao Farri was born in Bibbiano (Reggio Emilia) in 1924. In the post-war years he was one of the founder members of the Cooperativa Operai Tipografi (Printing workers cooperative) and has been a professional photographer since 1955. His special field is industrial and advertising photography and the reproduction of art and architecture works. Since the late Sixties he has been engaged in a study of rural civilization in the area of the Province of Reggio Emilia stretching between the Apennines and the Po river. His photographs are held at the Panizzi Library of Reggio Emilia and at the Study Centre and Communication Archive of Parma University, which dedicated an important monograph to him in 1986 edited by Massimo Mussini. PHOTOGALLERYINFORMATIONSInfo
Cloisters of San Domenico
Via Dante Alighieri 11 - Reggio Emilia Tel. 0522 456249 / 451152 Open Times: 6th May -12th June 2011 Opening days: 6th - 8th May 2011 Visiting hours (exhibitions at institutional venues): 6th May 6 pm - 12 am, 7th - 8th May 10 am - 11pm from 10th May Tuesday - Friday 9 pm - 11 pm, Saturdays, Sundays and National Holidays 10 am – 11 pm closed on Mondays. Tickets: 10 € single ticket includes admission to all the exhibits |
Pebbles and Beach House, Cayeaux sur Mer, France 2009© Michael Kenna
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