3 elements 253,3 x 18,5 x 29,0 cm each
Sabina Spada, Umberto Cavenago. Galleria Cortese, «Tema Celeste», nos. 59-60, Milano 1997
Umberto Cavenago’s installation for this exhibition comprises a blue conveyor belt in constant movement that runs throughout the gallery’s space, passing from one room to the other through a breach in the wall. This movement, a recurring theme in this artist’s works, generates communications between the two environments, inviting the spectator to move from one to the other, so as to enjoy the work to the full. In this way, the individual and the exhibition space are both expected to become active parts of the work, interacting with it and becoming elements essential to its existence.
Made using nothing but industrial materials and technologies, this work was designed in strict compliance with the procedures used to produce technological items. Nevertheless, it has been deprived of every function and is a long way away from being the symbol of alienating labour that a superficial analysis might lead to believe it to be: taken out of the context of utility it occupied in modern times and positioned along the axis of the sun’s trajectory, from east to west, the belt perpetuates its cyclic movement without transporting anything at all. This makes it the object of a purely aesthetic use, the vehicle of potential ponderings about the current state of art and of sculpture, no longer open to belated interpretation as a static object of contemplation. Its incessant motion also ensures that the spatial dynamic is immediately related to the temporal dynamic: the moving belt – a sort of mechanical sand-glass – accompanies the spectator in the passage of time, regulated and marked by electricity, the modern source of energy that flanks the sun, without replacing it completely, in regulating the human being’s vital rhythms.
Installation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Antonio Maniscalco3 elements 253,3 x 18,5 x 29,0 cm each
Sabina Spada, Umberto Cavenago. Galleria Cortese, «Tema Celeste», nos. 59-60, Milano 1997
Umberto Cavenago’s installation for this exhibition comprises a blue conveyor belt in constant movement that runs throughout the gallery’s space, passing from one room to the other through a breach in the wall. This movement, a recurring theme in this artist’s works, generates communications between the two environments, inviting the spectator to move from one to the other, so as to enjoy the work to the full. In this way, the individual and the exhibition space are both expected to become active parts of the work, interacting with it and becoming elements essential to its existence.
Made using nothing but industrial materials and technologies, this work was designed in strict compliance with the procedures used to produce technological items. Nevertheless, it has been deprived of every function and is a long way away from being the symbol of alienating labour that a superficial analysis might lead to believe it to be: taken out of the context of utility it occupied in modern times and positioned along the axis of the sun’s trajectory, from east to west, the belt perpetuates its cyclic movement without transporting anything at all. This makes it the object of a purely aesthetic use, the vehicle of potential ponderings about the current state of art and of sculpture, no longer open to belated interpretation as a static object of contemplation. Its incessant motion also ensures that the spatial dynamic is immediately related to the temporal dynamic: the moving belt – a sort of mechanical sand-glass – accompanies the spectator in the passage of time, regulated and marked by electricity, the modern source of energy that flanks the sun, without replacing it completely, in regulating the human being’s vital rhythms.
Installation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Antonio ManiscalcoInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Antonio ManiscalcoInstallation at Galleria La Giarina, Verona
Photo © Antonio ManiscalcoInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio ColomboInstallation at Galleria Raffaella Cortese, Milan
Photo © Giorgio Colombo
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