6th Biennale Gherdëina
WRITING THE MOUNTAINS
24 Jun - 15 Sep 2018
Curated by Adam Budak
Inaugurated on June 23rd, 2018 - the day of 268th anniversary of the birth of a Father of the Dolomites, Dieudonné Sylvain Guy Tancrède de Gratet de Dolomieu usually known as Déodat de Dolomieu, French geologist who in 1792 discovered a calcareous rock which would be named after him along with the grandiose mountain range of northeastern Italy - the 6th edition of the Biennale Gherdëina is a venture into the polymorphous nature of the mountains and their language.
Conducted under a desire of WRITING THE MOUNTAINS, the exhibition combines liminal disciplines of cultural geology, communal ecology, performative science and relational practice of engaged aesthetics, challenging conventional forms of representation and perception as in a reference to the vocabulary of nature, landscape and a community. It is a polylogue; it foregrounds collaborative and participatory modes of working, mingling polyphonic forms, from performance, including dance and singing, poetry and spoken word, through architecture and design, staging and display, down to the ephemeral forms, focused on communal spirit, engagement, and collectivity, notwithstanding research and in situ fieldwork. As such, WRITING THE MOUNTAINS is a poetic proposition; here, in what may be considered an act of learning from the mountains, (the language of) poetry is a score for a collection of artistic utterances that celebrate the site and its sublime intensity.
Poetic narrative Überwasser by Alessandro De Francesco, commissioned by the Biennale is a manifesto of an “intimate immensity” of the Dolomites: a series of sensual tableaux that along with a lexicon of the nature’s elemental language provide a prototype for WRITING THE MOUNTAINS multiple scenarios. From Gianni Pettena’s architectural intervention of POIESIS, echoing the anarchitect’s radical gestures of the late 1960s, through Nico Vascellari’s explorations of the alchemy and paganism, down to the lyrical fetishism of materials in the sculptural poetry of Alicja Kwade’s work, the exhibition zooms in and out the region’s dynamics of cultural, historical and linguistic nearness and distance. WOOW by Claudia Comte and her wooden Morphing Sculpture 1: Donut, Cactus and Snake (Viscosity Range) in a humorous way examine the formal vocabulary of surrounding nature and its geological past, along with Egill Sæbjörnsson’s animation Can Boulders Love?, yet another witty and oftentimes nostalgic take at the Dolomites’ morphological geo-diversity, a particular portrait of belonging. Sissa Micheli’s grandiose opera, Dolomieu, based upon the life and work of an adventurous scientist and performed on the balconies of Ortisei and Mathilde Rosier’s diorama, constructed within the backstage of Casa Ladina and restaging the artist’s procession We are those Fossils hidden in those Rocks. We are the Ocean hidden in Time appropriate the place as a vivid field of the Open, a performance of the region’s astounding natural history, while the Pavilion for Poetry Diogenes’ Barrel, commissioned by the biennale and especially designed by Jiří Příhoda, becomes a shelter for the poetic elaboration of a place, masterfully drafted by Alessandro De Francesco and an architectural framing of Sassolungo’s spectacular appearance. Public banquet Il dipartimento deglo avvoltoi (Departimënt di valtoies) by Fabien Vallos as both a gathering and an encounter is a monument of a collectivity, a sincere expression of Heideggerian “letting-oneself-into-nearness”, while Stefan Papčo’s wooden sculptures movingly celebrate the sense of belonging and praise the mountains as a place of ethical challenge and extreme existential experience, a poetic act of subjective world-making.
Mythical and mystical, “a book written in stone”, the Pale Mountains of the Dolomites, are opened up and transformed into a stage of an active poetry of proximity, performed by the artists in a generous series of encounters with the place and its lure. Thus as a sequel to the previous edition of the biennale which focused on the rhetoric of longing, WRITING THE MOUNTAINS searches for the patterns of belonging, identification and cohabitation. It pays an homage to the breathtaking mountains and the community which inhabits them, reflecting the endurance and resilience, so typical for this place and its people, praising the mountains as a site of awe and intimacy, emancipation and resistance. The exhibition considers the biotope of the mountains as a ritual in flux, archetypal and ever changing, redrafted and transcribed, over and over anew, both phantasmagoric and real, simultaneously sublime and mundane, an articulation of a desire, woven of legends, myths and everyday dreams.
Artists:
Mariana Castillo Deball (MX)
Claudia Comte (CH)
Alessandro De Francesco (IT)
Alicja Kwade (DE)
Sissa Micheli (IT)
Štefan Papčo (SK)
Giuseppe Penone (IT)
Simon Perathoner (IT)
Gianni Pettena (IT)
Agnieszka Polska (PL)
Jiří Příhoda (CZ)
Gregor Prugger (IT)
Mathilde Rosier (FR)
Egill Sæbjörnsson (IS)
Fabien Vallos (FR)
Nico Vascellari (IT)
Franz West (AT)
Inaugurated on June 23rd, 2018 - the day of 268th anniversary of the birth of a Father of the Dolomites, Dieudonné Sylvain Guy Tancrède de Gratet de Dolomieu usually known as Déodat de Dolomieu, French geologist who in 1792 discovered a calcareous rock which would be named after him along with the grandiose mountain range of northeastern Italy - the 6th edition of the Biennale Gherdëina is a venture into the polymorphous nature of the mountains and their language.
Conducted under a desire of WRITING THE MOUNTAINS, the exhibition combines liminal disciplines of cultural geology, communal ecology, performative science and relational practice of engaged aesthetics, challenging conventional forms of representation and perception as in a reference to the vocabulary of nature, landscape and a community. It is a polylogue; it foregrounds collaborative and participatory modes of working, mingling polyphonic forms, from performance, including dance and singing, poetry and spoken word, through architecture and design, staging and display, down to the ephemeral forms, focused on communal spirit, engagement, and collectivity, notwithstanding research and in situ fieldwork. As such, WRITING THE MOUNTAINS is a poetic proposition; here, in what may be considered an act of learning from the mountains, (the language of) poetry is a score for a collection of artistic utterances that celebrate the site and its sublime intensity.
Poetic narrative Überwasser by Alessandro De Francesco, commissioned by the Biennale is a manifesto of an “intimate immensity” of the Dolomites: a series of sensual tableaux that along with a lexicon of the nature’s elemental language provide a prototype for WRITING THE MOUNTAINS multiple scenarios. From Gianni Pettena’s architectural intervention of POIESIS, echoing the anarchitect’s radical gestures of the late 1960s, through Nico Vascellari’s explorations of the alchemy and paganism, down to the lyrical fetishism of materials in the sculptural poetry of Alicja Kwade’s work, the exhibition zooms in and out the region’s dynamics of cultural, historical and linguistic nearness and distance. WOOW by Claudia Comte and her wooden Morphing Sculpture 1: Donut, Cactus and Snake (Viscosity Range) in a humorous way examine the formal vocabulary of surrounding nature and its geological past, along with Egill Sæbjörnsson’s animation Can Boulders Love?, yet another witty and oftentimes nostalgic take at the Dolomites’ morphological geo-diversity, a particular portrait of belonging. Sissa Micheli’s grandiose opera, Dolomieu, based upon the life and work of an adventurous scientist and performed on the balconies of Ortisei and Mathilde Rosier’s diorama, constructed within the backstage of Casa Ladina and restaging the artist’s procession We are those Fossils hidden in those Rocks. We are the Ocean hidden in Time appropriate the place as a vivid field of the Open, a performance of the region’s astounding natural history, while the Pavilion for Poetry Diogenes’ Barrel, commissioned by the biennale and especially designed by Jiří Příhoda, becomes a shelter for the poetic elaboration of a place, masterfully drafted by Alessandro De Francesco and an architectural framing of Sassolungo’s spectacular appearance. Public banquet Il dipartimento deglo avvoltoi (Departimënt di valtoies) by Fabien Vallos as both a gathering and an encounter is a monument of a collectivity, a sincere expression of Heideggerian “letting-oneself-into-nearness”, while Stefan Papčo’s wooden sculptures movingly celebrate the sense of belonging and praise the mountains as a place of ethical challenge and extreme existential experience, a poetic act of subjective world-making.
Mythical and mystical, “a book written in stone”, the Pale Mountains of the Dolomites, are opened up and transformed into a stage of an active poetry of proximity, performed by the artists in a generous series of encounters with the place and its lure. Thus as a sequel to the previous edition of the biennale which focused on the rhetoric of longing, WRITING THE MOUNTAINS searches for the patterns of belonging, identification and cohabitation. It pays an homage to the breathtaking mountains and the community which inhabits them, reflecting the endurance and resilience, so typical for this place and its people, praising the mountains as a site of awe and intimacy, emancipation and resistance. The exhibition considers the biotope of the mountains as a ritual in flux, archetypal and ever changing, redrafted and transcribed, over and over anew, both phantasmagoric and real, simultaneously sublime and mundane, an articulation of a desire, woven of legends, myths and everyday dreams.
Artists:
Mariana Castillo Deball (MX)
Claudia Comte (CH)
Alessandro De Francesco (IT)
Alicja Kwade (DE)
Sissa Micheli (IT)
Štefan Papčo (SK)
Giuseppe Penone (IT)
Simon Perathoner (IT)
Gianni Pettena (IT)
Agnieszka Polska (PL)
Jiří Příhoda (CZ)
Gregor Prugger (IT)
Mathilde Rosier (FR)
Egill Sæbjörnsson (IS)
Fabien Vallos (FR)
Nico Vascellari (IT)
Franz West (AT)