Lutz & Guggisberg: Il Giardino (“the garden”)

Periodo: 22 Apr 2018 - 30 Dec 2018
Lutz & Guggisberg. Il giardino-Notarie

Il Giardino (“the garden”) is a new project conceived and created by Lutz & Guggisberg for the Collezione Maramotti.
This solo show – the Swiss duo’s first in an Italian museum – is organized in conjunction with the 2018 Fotografia Europea festival, “Revolutions. Upheavals, Changes, Utopias”. Stretching through five rooms, the exhibition presents more than twenty photographs of various sizes, mounted on panels and incorporating elements of painting, along with several assemblages of found objects that the artists have selected from local warehouses.

Sheds, tools, tables, chairs, brightly colored plastic tubs, crates, rubber tubing: in these photographs, everything seems uprooted and upended by some hurricane that has just swept through. The post-apocalyptic mood of the scenes hints at the recent passage of a natural disaster, but could also suggest an all-too-human process of violent destruction. At the same time, the images possess an intrinsic beauty. Within harmonious compositions of colours and forms, the small, lyrical details that leap out at the viewer are sometimes connected to the human realm (a round table top that becomes an earthbound moon, a shed cut in half and reassembled the wrong way around), sometimes to the natural one (snowdrops and crocuses peeping out of rubble, onion bulbs sprouting under tables, a sleeping cat).

These images point to the violent disruption of an established order, presenting Nature as an unconquerable force that is infinitely more powerful than human beings or human history; through a process of destruction and reconstruction, it resumes its course and reclaims control over the handiwork of man. Revolution is seen here as a form of movement, in two senses: a shift in trajectory that leads out of a given state, but at the same time, the circular path followed by natural cycles. The pictorial alterations of the printed images move into a world beyond photography, opening up the alternate – perhaps utopian – dimension that is characteristic of any artistic process.

For further information, please visit the website: www.collezionemaramotti.org

Location: Collezione Maramotti. Via fratelli cervi 66, Reggio Emilia