Lost Beauty

 

Lost Beauty

各种形式和表现的艺术一直是 Visionnaire 的灵感源泉。艺术与设计之间的和谐对话已经成为该品牌的内在基因,LOST BEAUTY 则体现了兼收并蓄、热情奔放的风格,结合实践精神与融合语言的能力,这是其哲学与精湛技艺的标志。

Art in all its forms and expressions has always been a source of inspiration for Visionnaire. The dialogue in unison between art and design has become an intrinsic part of the brand’s DNA, and LOST BEAUTY typifies the eclectic, passionate approach combined with an aptitude for experimentation and the fusion of languages that are the hallmarks of its philosophy and savoir faire.

Beauty found in unusual representations of reality is the main theme of the Wunderkammer Visionnaire for Salone del Mobile 2014. To further reinforce the tie between Visionnaire and the world of art, the invited artists will feature with a dual site specific display, on the stand at the fair and in the Wunderkammer, designed to enhance the mood of the furniture collection, which this year is centred on the figure of the Dandy. A shadowy area with a Victoria Gothic atmosphere will be the setting for sculptures and highly imaginative works in ceramic, silicon, resin paints and precious materials.

Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer

Dreams, realism and hyperrealism meet and blend; beauty is not obvious but concealed behind the sometimes raw strength of the works. The new ceramic sculptures by Bertozzi & Casoni, ironic champions of a realism of the impossible, dialogue with Diego Scroppo’s magnificent, disquieting works, the results of a laborious process which combines state of the art prototyping techniques with slowly executed manual skill. Alessandro Brighetti’s kinetic alchemies that pursue the transmutations of an obscure, prodigious material; Rita Miranda’s creations, a mix of Raku wisdom, minimalist rigour and organic intimations; the reflections of the CaCO3 artistic collective on the formal aspects of mosaics and their re-working in the pursuit of new relations between light and material. Then there are Antonio Fiorini’s meticulous polaroid-format oil paintings, exquisite zoomorphic figures by Michele Astolfi, the ironic sensuality of Daniel Gonzalez’s works, Domenico Grenci’s fragmented, decadent women’s faces and the mise en scène created by Nina Surel to recount the changeable, mysterious world of women. A journey through creative interpretations that blur the lines between pure and applied arts. A hidden, unconventional beauty that the visionary Dandy traveller collects to unequivocally define the distance that sets him apart from the rest of the world.

Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Lost Beauty. Visionnaire Wunderkammer

Artist

Domenico Grenci

The figures depicted by Domenico Grenci float in a dimension outside of time, lacking any material reference. The stage is empty, the only actor in this scene is the woman. Grenci’s female faces seem to emerge from an old photograph worn by time. The undefined, unfinished alien effect, similar to that evoked by a blurred or faded image, is created by bitumen, a poor and paradoxically heavy material. The artist attempts to capture something hidden in these disquieting, enigmatic faces that ask questions to which perhaps no answers exist. He does so without ill-treating them, with sensitivity and the deepest respect for women, who are complicated and sensual, vulnerable and strong at the same time, trying to extrapolate their essence, in all its nuances.

He effects what he himself calls an “elevatio animae”, which in a way redresses the offence caused to that identity by the commercialization of the body and skin-deep beauty imposed on us by the fashion industry and the media. Domenico Grenci graduated at the Art Academy in Bologna in 2007. He has taken part to several awards, receiving numerous prizes: Incision “Morandi” prize (2005); Celeste Prize (2007); Goldener kentaur: European Academic Award, Munich (2007, 1st place); “Maggio Fiorito”, Ferrara (2008, 1st place) and Art National prize in Catania. The recent invitation to exhibit at the 54th edition of the “Biennale” in Venice, Arsenale, Tese di San Cristoforo, confirms the important work done by this young Italian artist.

Nina Surel

Nina Surel’s full-size women, intriguing and characterized by an aristocratic, fairytale allure, are portrayed against a richly decorative background. They are innovative works, inspired by the artist’s interest in romantic female literature. hey depict women reenacting their fantasies, their disguises, their sub-conscious desires so often repressed in everyday social situations. Nina Surel’s whimsical figures, depicted on the edge of a wood, always originate from a photographic self-portrait, dressed differently each time and adorned with flowers or jewels until she takes on a new identity. A self-portrait of an intentionally inexpressive face, as if to embody the essence of the mercurial, mysterious world of women. Surel’s wood is a kind of set, a background narrative, but also an archetypical place tied to states of psychological conscience or unconscious, to what is permitted or forbidden. The artist uses a wide range of techniques in her works: photography, painting, collages of lace, buttons, chinaware and jewels fixed to the substrate with layers of clear resin. Nina Surel seems to investigate her own true identity as a woman and artist through her sensual images, in a kind of personal re-writing of female history. Nina Surel was born and raised in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and lives and works in Miami since 2001. She studied at the Architecture & Urban Planning University of Buenos Aires. Her work has been exhibited widely in institutions, galleries and art fairs both in the United States and South America.

Tata Borello

Officina Bijoux was born from the intuition and initiative of a young Federica Borello, stylist for passion, in Spring 2001. She starts from scratch, at home, almost for fun. Success goes beyond every expectation. She works with famous fashion and luxury brands for the creation of jewels collections in limited edition.

Alessandro Brighetti

(Bologna, 1978). Born in a family of doctors, after the scientific school qualification he starts his artistic career by enrolling at the Arts Academy in Bologna. From this moment, Alessandro Brighetti’s research enters an artistic gender which studies the relationships between art and nature, art and science, art and biology, art and chemistry, art and technology. Considering its positive aspects as well as its aberrations, technology becomes therefore the instrument for modifying the nature, which is essential for the artist to get a central role in his dimension of creator and experimenter.

Diego Scroppo

Diego Scroppo was born in Torino in 1981. He graduates at the “Albertina” Art Academy in Torino in 2005 and continues his training in important schools and European organizations. Heir of a sincere monumental tradition, Scroppo proposes a very modern style but at the same time primitive, such as the shapes that conceives and the materials that uses. His creations, which are mostly played in the realism of the shapes and of the representation and which recall certain surrealistic atmospheres, are a brilliant synthesis of organic and inorganic, of memory and innovation, of elegance and disturbance. Scroppo’s art works are beautiful but also disturbing because of this living-on-the-edge and of the extreme industriousness of the process they come from, process where the most innovative prototype techniques join a very slow and fatiguing manuality. These art works are rare and precious and engage the artist from the first project phases, merely speculative, to the last finishings in studio, through nearly microsurgical interventions on details.

Bertozzi&Casoni

Their artistic work is focused on the use of ceramic materials to which industrial techniques are applied, often generating new hybrids materials thanks to a highly experimental approach. Starting from the 80’s Bertozzi & Casoni take part to the recovery of the Italian majolica tradition bound to the experiences of “La Nuova Ceramica”, exhibiting in important collective exhibitions in Italy and to a serie of exhibitions dedicated to the Italian contemporary ceramic art in Japan. In the 90’s they do important public works, such as the urban path with fountains and sculptures in the Tama district in Tokyo. They have been invited to represent Italy during the 53rd “Biennale” in Venice in 2009.

Antonio Fiorini

(Brindisi, 1980). After the Art School he attends the Brera Academy. In his twenties, he takes part to the show “Pitture. 21 artisti del XXI secolo” (Paintings. 21 artists of the XXI century), curated by Massimo Guastella, Castello Aragonese, Otranto, and in 2003 he is selected by Luca Beatrice and Norma Mangione for the collective exhibition “XS. Extra Small (Galleria San Salvatore, Modena); in the same year he wins the first prize at the “Salon Primo”, at the Museum of the Permanente in Milan, and in 2004 one of his art works is recommended by Luciano Caramel at the “Michetti Award”, Fondazione Michetti, Francavilla al Mare. Since then, he has taken part to several personal and collective exhibitions, until his recent participation to the Biennale Award of Contemporary Art Saint-Vincent 2012, which has named it among the 44 young artists selected by the directors of the Academies of the 25 States belonging to the European Community.

Daniel Gonzalez

(Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1963). He lives and works between Berlin and New York. He has taken part on big exhibitions and public works, the last of which is “Pop-up museo Disco Club”, made for the “Biennale” of the Barrio Museum in New York in 2011, and “Pop-up building”, transformation of a classic Rotterdam architectural structure in a “carton fairytale”, through the pop-up books look, open during the festival Witte de With Straat 2010. Also the two big scale works created in co-operation with the Italian artist Anna Galtarossa cannot be forgotten: “Chili Moon Town Tour”, a floating Utopian city of dreams, inaugurated at the Lago Mayor di Bosque de Chapultepec in Mexico City in 2007, and “Homeless Rocket With Chandeliers”, setting created at Lambrate (Milano) in the same year on a crane “contaminated” by objects and materials referring to the “street culture”.

CaCo3

The group CaCO3 was founded in 2006 on the initiative of three artists, Aniko Ferreira da Silva, Giuseppe Donnaloia and Pavlos Mavromatidis, after having shared the experience of training at the "School for the Restoration of Mosaics" in Ravenna. Chemical formula of calcium carbonate, or limestone, the name CaCO3 refers to a raw material commonly used for the realization of the mosaics. The study and practice of traditional technique and the direct contact with the mosaic works of the past, made ​​possible during the years of study and work experience in restoration sites, contributes to the sharing of a common reflection on the formal aspects of the mosaic and their elaboration, aimed at finding new possible relationships between light and matter.

Rita Miranda

Rita Miranda was born in Todi, where she lives and works. When she was very young, she started joining the practice of the drawing and painting techniques to the scientific studies. She has found in the Raky ceramic the technique which better combines her creative needs to the sensitivity and inspiration to the forms of nature. Her works have been displayed in several personal and collective exhibitions. She has taken part to the Biennale of Contemporary Ceramic Art, Scuderie Aldobrandini, Frascati (2012) and to the Biennale of Venice, Padiglione Italia (2011).

Other exhibitions