Carlo Mollino
08 Nov 2014 - 10 Jan 2015
CARLO MOLLINO
Polaroids
8 November 2014 – 10 January 2015
Everything is permissible as long as it is fantastic.
—Carlo Mollino
Gagosian New York, in collaboration with Museo Casa Mollino, Turin, is pleased to present Polaroids by Carlo Mollino.
Over the course of four decades, the architect Mollino (1905–1973) merged elements of Surrealism, Art Nouveau, Futurism, ancient mythology, and a passion for the female form to create what designer George Nelson described as an individual “Turinese baroque.” His extraordinarily diverse oeuvre included architecture, furniture, automobiles, aircraft, writings on topics from photography to skiing, and the Polaroids that remained a secret until his death. In his architectural works which include the Turin Equestrian Association (1937), Slittovia del Lago Nero, Susa Valley (1946), and Teatro Regio, Turin (1973), he reconciled the vernacular architecture of the Italian Alps with Modernist influences to produce new and radical geometries sustained by engineering pragmatism. His whimsical yet functional furniture, including the Arabesque Table (1950), Lattes Chair and Copenhagen Chair (both 1951), inspired by organic, anatomical, and feminine forms, has profoundly influenced designers to this day.
Mollino produced photographic works throughout his career, and defined art photography in the critical study he published in 1949, Message from the Darkroom (1943). In 1962, he purchased and began to redesign Villa Zaira, a secluded house in the hills above Turin, as a refuge and photographic set. There, he abandoned his use of conventional cameras and darkroom techniques and began a prolonged series of Polaroid portraits of female models. The images of models’ bodies, naked or “furnished” with lace and clothing chosen by Mollino, presented a refined photographic documentation of feminine complexity and seduction, sometimes skillfully and imperceptibly retouched.
Controlling the uncertainty of the instant Polaroid medium (first using a model 800, then later models 900 and J66), Mollino carefully directed each shot, then mounted the Polaroids onto cardboard and treated them with an anti-UV protective varnish. Over eleven years, many models styled in various states presented themselves to Mollino for the composition of a unique photographic portrait—each a meticulously built architectural project. These images were kept secret, never exhibited by their creator. They were discovered and published for the first time by Fulvio Ferrari in 1985.
Many questions have been raised about the meaning of this vast, inexplicable body of work by Mollino. Through symbols that he used, the Polaroids can be interpreted as an imaginary yet tangible apparatus similar to the ushabtis prepared by the Egyptian pharaohs or Chinese terracotta warriors—but rather than a symbol of power and richness, they function as an image of immortal beauty.
Carlo Mollino was born in Turin in 1905, and died in 1973. He graduated from the School of Architecture at the University of Turin in 1931. His work across various media is represented in public collections worldwide, including Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Brooklyn Museum, New York; and Vitra Design Museum, Basel. Selected solo exhibitions include “Carlo Mollino,” Mole Antonelliana, Turin (1989, traveled to Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris as “L'Etrange Univers De L'architecte Carlo Mollino,” and Nederlands Architectuurinstituut, Rotterdam, through 1990); “Mollino Fragments,” MAXXI, Rome (2006); “Carlo Mollino,” Castello di Rivoli and Galleria Civica d’arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin (2006–07); “Carlo Mollino: Un Messaggio dalla Camera Oscura,” Kunsthalle Wien (2011); “Carlo Mollino: Maniera moderna,” Haus der Kunst, Munich (2011–12); and “Mollino Pharmacy,” Nottingham Contemporary, England (2012). The revised, fully illustrated edition “Carlo Mollino: Polaroids,” by Fulvio and Napoleone Ferrari, was published by Damiani in 2014.
Polaroids
8 November 2014 – 10 January 2015
Everything is permissible as long as it is fantastic.
—Carlo Mollino
Gagosian New York, in collaboration with Museo Casa Mollino, Turin, is pleased to present Polaroids by Carlo Mollino.
Over the course of four decades, the architect Mollino (1905–1973) merged elements of Surrealism, Art Nouveau, Futurism, ancient mythology, and a passion for the female form to create what designer George Nelson described as an individual “Turinese baroque.” His extraordinarily diverse oeuvre included architecture, furniture, automobiles, aircraft, writings on topics from photography to skiing, and the Polaroids that remained a secret until his death. In his architectural works which include the Turin Equestrian Association (1937), Slittovia del Lago Nero, Susa Valley (1946), and Teatro Regio, Turin (1973), he reconciled the vernacular architecture of the Italian Alps with Modernist influences to produce new and radical geometries sustained by engineering pragmatism. His whimsical yet functional furniture, including the Arabesque Table (1950), Lattes Chair and Copenhagen Chair (both 1951), inspired by organic, anatomical, and feminine forms, has profoundly influenced designers to this day.
Mollino produced photographic works throughout his career, and defined art photography in the critical study he published in 1949, Message from the Darkroom (1943). In 1962, he purchased and began to redesign Villa Zaira, a secluded house in the hills above Turin, as a refuge and photographic set. There, he abandoned his use of conventional cameras and darkroom techniques and began a prolonged series of Polaroid portraits of female models. The images of models’ bodies, naked or “furnished” with lace and clothing chosen by Mollino, presented a refined photographic documentation of feminine complexity and seduction, sometimes skillfully and imperceptibly retouched.
Controlling the uncertainty of the instant Polaroid medium (first using a model 800, then later models 900 and J66), Mollino carefully directed each shot, then mounted the Polaroids onto cardboard and treated them with an anti-UV protective varnish. Over eleven years, many models styled in various states presented themselves to Mollino for the composition of a unique photographic portrait—each a meticulously built architectural project. These images were kept secret, never exhibited by their creator. They were discovered and published for the first time by Fulvio Ferrari in 1985.
Many questions have been raised about the meaning of this vast, inexplicable body of work by Mollino. Through symbols that he used, the Polaroids can be interpreted as an imaginary yet tangible apparatus similar to the ushabtis prepared by the Egyptian pharaohs or Chinese terracotta warriors—but rather than a symbol of power and richness, they function as an image of immortal beauty.
Carlo Mollino was born in Turin in 1905, and died in 1973. He graduated from the School of Architecture at the University of Turin in 1931. His work across various media is represented in public collections worldwide, including Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Brooklyn Museum, New York; and Vitra Design Museum, Basel. Selected solo exhibitions include “Carlo Mollino,” Mole Antonelliana, Turin (1989, traveled to Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris as “L'Etrange Univers De L'architecte Carlo Mollino,” and Nederlands Architectuurinstituut, Rotterdam, through 1990); “Mollino Fragments,” MAXXI, Rome (2006); “Carlo Mollino,” Castello di Rivoli and Galleria Civica d’arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin (2006–07); “Carlo Mollino: Un Messaggio dalla Camera Oscura,” Kunsthalle Wien (2011); “Carlo Mollino: Maniera moderna,” Haus der Kunst, Munich (2011–12); and “Mollino Pharmacy,” Nottingham Contemporary, England (2012). The revised, fully illustrated edition “Carlo Mollino: Polaroids,” by Fulvio and Napoleone Ferrari, was published by Damiani in 2014.