Maurizio Cattelan: All. Maurizio Cattelan

Maurizio Cattelan: All - Maurizio  Cattelan


Скачать книгу
href="#ulink_4203ec3c-a252-51d4-b2c0-7e478fabaa5e">48 Carved with the exacting detail of Michelangelo’s David (1501–04), of stone hewn from the same Italian quarry some five hundred years later, the piece invokes the legacy of the Renaissance. At the same time, however, it offers a most vulgar gesture, perhaps the most universal sign of derision.49 But the work’s origin in violence—imagine a hand held taut in a Fascist salute with all of its fingers, save for the middle digit, chopped off—disallows a purely amused response. This antimonument defies all the traditional functions of commemorative public art. Instead of commanding respect for some accepted ideology or focusing collective memory, it is both humorous in its irreverence and horrific in its brutality. Cattelan had rehearsed such contradictory impulses in an earlier “monument” he created in 1999 for an exhibition at the Anthony d’Offay Gallery in London. With a sardonic swipe at British pride, he presented an oversized granite plaque—with clear references to Maya Lin’s Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.—that listed all the defeats of England’s national soccer team (cat. no. 72). By treading on “sacred” territory, Cattelan acknowledged at the time that he was making a shocking gesture but not, he blithely claimed, one so out of the ordinary: “It’s like pointing a gun at an ambulance or insulting your own mother. It’s considered outrageous, but it seems like everyone does such things once in a while.”50 The piece in London was, of course, cloistered within the rarefied atmosphere of an art gallery and thus relatively protected. But the Milan sculpture occupied a public square for months, courting controversy and winning many converts.51 This acceptance eluded a previous, untitled outdoor sculpture in Milan commissioned by the Fondazione Nicola Trussardi for the city’s Piazza XXIV Maggio. This 2004 work (fig. 14), comprising three life-size effigies of charmingly innocent, barefoot boys hanging from nooses in an oak tree, was attacked by an outraged viewer who managed to injure himself while cutting them down from their makeshift gallows.52 There are, it seems, some subjects still considered taboo today, one of them being children suffering. But Cattelan reveals the paradox in such overly moralizing thought: such anguish is all too real around the world, and everywhere one looks—newspapers, magazines, the Internet—one is confronted by news of childhood starvation, displacement, and exploitation.

Untitled (Trussardi)

      fig. 14 Untitled, 2004

      Cattelan has examined the effects of economic deprivation before. His sculptures of “homeless” figures huddled against walls, rendered simply from stuffed clothes and blankets, are temporary outdoor installations that tend to unnerve the public for their casual verisimilitude and the interventionist nature of their placement (fig. 15). Andreas e Mattia (Andreas and Mattia, 1996), a slumped hooded figure, was created for an exhibition at the Galleria civica d’arte moderna e contemporanea in Turin and originally shown outside, where people mistook the figure to be a vagrant, ignoring him as they are wont to do when confronted with the hopelessly needy. (It took more than a few days for someone to call the Italian equivalent of 911 to report a homeless person who had not moved for an alarmingly long period of time.) Cattelan produced a similar intervention when invited to create an exhibition at the Institute of Visual Arts at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, in 1998. Kenneth (cat. no. 45), another disheveled drifter, occupied a space in the city as a monument to failure but also to freedom. As suggested by his aversion to work and his frequently staged flights from responsibility, Cattelan identifies with the trope of the vagabond. Reminiscing about Padua, he recalled numerous homeless characters who became staples of the city, “celebrities of the streets” who, in some cases, had become itinerant as an act of protest (against taxes, the responsibilities of ownership, and so on). Regardless of a certain admiration and curiosity, however, Cattelan does not glorify these figures. Instead, they represent a pervasive breakdown of the system, a reminder that the social contract has many devastating loopholes. Given his childhood deprivation, such investigations presumably have a personal resonance.

Gérard

      fig. 15

       Gérard, 1999


Скачать книгу