• GIORGIO GRIFFA
    FRAGMENTS 1968 - 2012

    EXHIBITION DATES: JANUARY 10 – MARCH 2, 2013 OPENING: THURSDAY, JANUARY, 6-8PM

    “I don’t portray anything, I paint.” Giorgio Griffa, 1973

    Casey Kaplan is pleased to announce FRAGMENTS 1968 – 2012, an exhibition of new and historical paintings by Giorgio Griffa (b. 1936, Torino, Italy). Spanning four decades of Griffa’s career, this is the first solo exhibition of the artist’s work in New York since 1970, as well as his first in the United States since 1973.

    The exhibition presents a selection from over forty years of Griffa’s paintings on un-stretched canvas and linen. Throughout the past four decades, Griffa has undertaken a practice that he describes as “constant and never finished”, adhering to “the memory of material”, and to the belief that the gesture of painting is an infinite one. Within the finite frame of his canvas, each artwork becomes a site of collaboration between painting and the painter as the hand works to reveal a constellation of signs and symbols. This relationship is further mediated by the materiality of the works: the absorption of the acrylic into the fabric from each stroke dictates the brush’s next move. The completion of a canvas functions as a suspension of this relationship. After the acrylic has dried, each painting is carefully and neatly folded into uniform sections and filed as a register of their collective life as a whole.

    The artworks from the late 1960s and 1970s display the use of an “anonymous” sign, the simple and repetitive movement of the artist’s paintbrush to create uniform task-like marks that serve to record the process of painting. These early, minimal compositions began with ordered horizontal and vertical lines that eventually gave way to the use of sponges and fingerprints. While this period displays a shift from the anonymous to the personal, it is united through the consistency of deliberate end points or breaks in pattern and reveals the construction of the paintings as an action interrupted.

    Griffa’s paintings actively resists perspective and narrative, instead favoring a cyclical connection to the memory of painting as an action. Time is present through aesthetic shifts in the work that are most notable by decade. These mark making variations reveal an awareness of the artist’s surroundings and provide evidence of the time within which he was working. For example, in the 1980s Griffa’s practice evolved to include expressive forms and brighter tones, coexisting with discordant arrangements of unfinished planes of color. He began to utilize a more concrete set of references in the “Alter-Ego” series (1978 – 2008), in which Griffa aspired to come to terms with aspects of painting’s memory within the works of other artists, such as: Henri Matisse, Mario Merz, Yves Klein, Tintoretto, Joseph Beuys as well as imagery of the Romanesque and International Gothic periods.

    This shift, from ordered marks towards a broad range of gestures, eventually led to the inclusion of numerical systems into his artworks in the 1990s. Still characterizing his paintings today, the “Canone Aureo” series displays Griffa’s interest in mathematic and scientific structures that underlie our natural world. These infinite sequences, such as the Fibonacci series and the Golden Ratio, act as a parallel to Griffa’s practice, and additionally function as punctuations in the work’s vocabulary. They also determine and organize the signs within a work. Despite these varied trajectories, it is the act of painting that always remains at the forefront. Griffa said in a recent interview with Luca Massimo Barbero: “If these works have the power to speak and to listen, I’ll let them do it themselves.”

    Giorgio Griffa joined the gallery’s program in 2011. Solo presentations of his work include MACRO, Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rome (2011), Neuer Kunstverein, Aschaffenburg (2005), Sta?dische Kunsthalle, Dusseldorf (1978) and Sonnabend Gallery, New York (1970), among others. His work was presented in the 38th and 40th Venice Bienniale in 1978 and 1980, as well as in group exhibitions at Musee d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Museum Abteiberg, Kunstverein Mu?nster, Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Kunstverein Hannover, Stadtische Museum, Monchengladbach, Kunstverein Frankfurt and Moderna Museet, Stockholm.

    QUASI UNA SPIRALE

    2008

    Acrylic on canvas

    34.6 x 29.1" / 88 x 74cm each

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Linea spezzata

    1970

    Acrylic on canvas

    68.9 x 90.6" / 175 x 230cm

    Linea spezzata

    1970

    Acrylic on canvas

    68.9 x 90.6" / 175 x 230cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Obliquo

    1970

    Acrylic on canvas

    70.9 x 74.8" / 180 x 190cm

    Obliquo

    1970

    Acrylic on canvas

    70.9 x 74.8" / 180 x 190cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Strisce orizzontali

    1976

    Acrylic on canvas

    106.3 x 108.3" / 270 x 275cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Obliquo giallo

    1971

    Acrylic on canvas

    69.7 x 89" / 177 x 226cm

    Obliquo giallo

    1971

    Acrylic on canvas

    69.7 x 89" / 177 x 226cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Festone

    1984

    Acrylic on canvas

    58.3 x 55.9" / 148 x 142cm

    Acrylic on canvas

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Linee orizzontali

    1973

    Acrylic on Canvas

    59 x 171.3" / 150 x 435cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    PAOLO E PIERO

    1982

    Acrylic on canvas

    118.1 x 212.6" / 300 x 540cm

    PAOLO E PIERO

    1982

    Acrylic on canvas

    118.1 x 212.6" / 300 x 540cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    DDB (DA DANIEL BUREN)

    1997

    Acrylic on canvas

    46.5 x 43.3" / 118 x 110cm each

    DDB (DA DANIEL BUREN)

    1997

    Acrylic on canvas

    46.5 x 43.3" / 118 x 110cm each

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Macchie

    1969

    Acrylic and pastel on canvas

    68.9 x 66.9" / 175 x 170cm

    Macchie

    1969

    Acrylic and pastel on canvas

    68.9 x 66.9" / 175 x 170cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    CANONE AUREO 458

    2012

    Acrylic on canvas

    63 x 39.4" / 160 x 100cm

    CANONE AUREO 443

    2012

    Acrylic on canvas

    63 x 39.4" / 160 x 100cm

    Segni orizzontali

    1975

    Acrylic on canvas

    57.5 x 74" / 146 x 188cm

    Segni orizzontali

    1975

    Acrylic on canvas

    57.5 x 74" / 146 x 188cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Linee orizzontali

    1974

    Acrylic on canvas

    46 x 112.6" / 117 x 286cm

    Linee orizzontali

    1974

    Acrylic on canvas

    46 x 112.6" / 117 x 286cm

    Exhibition view, Fragments 1968-2012

    Quasi dipinto

    1968

    Acrylic on canvas

    79 x 58" / 200.7 x 147.3cm

    Fragments 1968 – 2012

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