Costantino Nivola’s clay artworks and my own perception of art
Costantino Nivola was a Sardinian artist. He was born in Orani in 1911 and died in New York in 1988. Among his least known artworks are the series made from fired clay (terracotta): the beds, the beaches and the swimming pools.
The rooms of the Renaissance
One of the most innovative elements of the art of the Renaissance is that private commissions became very common. This novelty allowed the introduction of new languages and new subjects, more secular and often political. Knowing where these artworks were placed allows us to deeply understand the motivations behind private commissions.
The Currency, the new provocation by Damien Hirst (EN)
Damien Hirst is the enfant terrible of contemporary art. He always manages to surprise us, but he also asks us some questions, for example on life and death, on what is moral or on the value of art. With his new initiative, The Currency (23 September -30 October at Newport Street Gallery in London), Hirst provokes us once again.
Vigil by Caterina Barbieri and Ruben Spini (EN)
The exhibition Future Shock was a journey through fourteen video, multimedia or sonic installations (or all of them together). The installations were of variable quality. A bunch of them was really remarkable and, among them, there is one that moved me: it is Vigil, by Caterina Barbieri and Ruben Spini.