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Manu-Facture: The Ceramics of Lucio Fontana - Peggy Guggenheim Collection - Venice

  • streetnet
  • Oct 4
  • 1 min read
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This is the first museum exhibition dedicated exclusively to the ceramic work of Lucio Fontana (1899–1968), one of the most innovative, and in his unique way irreverent, artists of the twentieth century. While Fontana is best known for his iconic, slashed and punctured canvases of the 1950s and ‘60s, Manu-Facture: The Ceramics of Lucio of Fontana, organized by art historian Sharon Hecker, casts a spotlight on a lesser known but essential part of his oeuvre: his work in clay, which he began in Argentina in the 1920s and continued to explore throughout his life.

Through over seventy works, including several never previously exhibited, on loan from renowned public and private collections, the show seeks to illuminate the full scope of Fontana’s sculptural vision in clay, revealing how over the years he regarded it as a rich, generative site of experimentation. His ceramic practice unfolded across several decades and vastly different contexts: from his early work in Argentina to his return to Fascist-era Italy, to another long stay in Argentina, and again in Italy after World War II during reconstruction and the later economic boom. Go to Website




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