• The Happy Face of Globalization:Biennial of Ceramics in Contemporary Art – Daniela Conradi

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    The Happy Face of Globalization:Biennial of Ceramics in Contemporary Art

    Daniela Conradi

    The Inspiration
    of the Attese, Biennale of Ceramics in Contemporary Art, lies in the 20th century
    avant-garde tradition that, in its most significant phases, found an outlet for
    expression in this area of Western Liguria well known for its long-established
    ceramics manufactures.

    Departing from the numerous noteworthy traces left in this area in the course
    of the last century, by artists such as Asger Jorn, Lucio Fontana, Wifredo Lam,
    Piero Manzoni and Pinot Gallizio, main goal of the Biennale is that of, once
    again, bringing contemporary artists, curators, art historians and critics into
    contact with this local and multicultural tradition in order to develop a process
    of reciprocal metamorphosis.

    Invited by founders and artistic directors Tiziana Casapietra and Roberto Costantino
    and a team of 8 international curators, 44 contemporary artists coming from Europe,
    Africa, Asia, South and North America, have been asked to abandon their customary
    media, in order to make works in ceramics in together with 14 manufactures of
    this area of the Ligurian Riviera.

    The Biennale is
    in fact mainly meant as a work-in-progress lasting 2 years, during which, all
    the invited artists do follow one another in the local ceramics factories. The
    result of this collaboration will be presented during the second edition of the
    Biennale due to open on September 27th this year.

    This co-operation between the international artists and the local craftsmen,
    is of major importance to the Biennale and represents fertile terrain that feeds
    a sense of affectionate hospitality and openness with respects to that which
    is different and distant.

    Is the mobility of the participating artists, coming from various international
    countries towards the tiny dot on the map which is Albisola, what has made this
    project possible.

    It might be this
    very aspect that is so appealing to the invited artists. Accustomed as they are
    to working in the world1s largest, most chaotic cities, they arrive in this little
    spot on the Mediterranean coast and lay themselves open to the people and the
    culture of the place in which they find themselves and engage in a fruitful exchange
    of ideas; but most of all, they lay themselves open to a new material, putting
    their artistic identities at risk.

    The various protagonists from the new extraterritorial and multicultural global
    art scene who have temporarily descended upon Albisola find themselves in a position
    whereby they have to filter their own identities through the possibilities and
    the limitations of an ancient medium (ceramics), all the while throwing themselves
    into a process of affirmation and translation of their own cultural singularity.

    In turn, the local
    area is welcoming hitherto unseen contributions which sees the material worked
    in a key of metamorphosis. The final effect is that each and every component
    is transformed and enriched, the transforming reciprocity being a founding factor
    in the manufacture of these works.

    In the age of “globalization”, an unpalatable word that points to an
    overridingly uniform culture at a planetary level, and to the disappearance of
    local cultural traditions, this exhibition hypothesizes a proliferation of the
    antibodies needed to resist just such a threat.

    This involves flying in the face of the overriding homologating culture that
    quashes all differences ‹ in order to promote multicultural exchanges

    in a spirit of hospitality as offered by a local tradition such asAlbisola1s
    ceramic history.

    In an attempt to
    allow the local reality becoming a space of flux and connection between cultures,
    the Attese, Biennale of Ceramics in Contemporary Art has spawned a community
    in the formation phase, the unpredictable identity of which is either confirmed
    or modified by every

    last participating artist.

    One is tempted to define this as a “community of passion” that has
    broughttogether all its protagonists in Albisola for the duration of a

    2-years-lasting-project which gives form to this Biennale.

    For further Info on the upcoming Bienale, see:

    Attese: Biennale of Ceramics in Contemporary Art (2nd edition)

    International Exhibition: September 27/November 9th, 2003

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