Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Monia Ben Hamouda, Michele Gabriele, Lucia Leuci, Namsal Siedlecki
Curated by Treti Galaxie Presented by 101 Numeri Pari
The project was realized within the frame of Toscanaincontemporanea2020
101 Numeri Pari is proud to present Endless Nostalghia, a project curated by Treti Galaxie with works by Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Monia Ben Hamouda, Michele Gabriele, Lucia Leuci, Namsal Siedlecki.
The project creates a relation between a series of works by Italian artists and the locations where Andrej Tarkovskij (1932-1986) filmed Nostalghia (1983), the sixth and second to last movie by the Russian director, which was also the first realized out of the Soviet Union. The strongly autobiographical picture is filled with a constant feeling of pain and longing for the director’s home country, sentiments that are underlined by the framing of the Italian landscapes, that constantly recall Tarkovskij’s beloved Russian countryside.
Endless Nostalghia wishes to pull together the personal sentiment of nostalgia expressed in the movie by Tarkovskij and the one universally felt during the COVID-19 emergency lockdown, when it was forbidden to leave the house, cross borders and visit the places we love.
Giorgio Andreotta Calò’s works, Medusa (2016) and Pinna Nobilis (2016-17), were installed within the ruins of the Sunken Church of Santa Maria in Vittorino, close to Cittaducale (RI); the cycle of silver sculptures Trevis Maponos (2020) by Namsal Siedlecki was placed in the thermal baths of Piazza delle Sorgenti, in Bagno Vignoni. Lucia Leuci’s work Sculpture (Piero), realized for the occasion, was installed in the Museo della Madonna del Parto in Monterchi, in order to create a dialogue with the fresco by Piero della Francesca preserved there. Monia Ben Hamouda’s work Blair (2020) and Michele Gabriele’s Sitting on the ground, so I will remember it as a nice atmosphere (2020) were also conceived for this exhibition, and installed respectively in Piazza del Campidoglio and between Piazza del Campidoglio and Via dei Condotti, in Rome.
For a brief period of time each place hosted an “impossible” solo show, that only exists through its photographic documentation, highlighting the idealized and detached nature of every communication carried out through digital devices.
The material will be presented on endlessnostalghia.com, a never-ending webpage. Built like a short movie where the passing of time is entrusted to each user’s scrolling pace, the website presents in a linear sequence a series of exhibitions that are always different, but grafted onto the same structure.
Among the objectives of this initiative are the valorization and promotion of the territories that hosted the filming of the movie, in order to invite the public to physically visit the location of each intervention at a critical time for tourism and culture, on both a regional and national scale. This is why, over time, the website will be updated with secret contents, suggestions and itineraries that will allow everyone to explore, not only virtually, the chapters that make up the exhibition.