Entertainment news
Music_news_and_reviews.html

TV

Art

A Multitude of Soap Bubbles Which Explode from Time to Time, Pino Pascali's Final Works 1967-1968 at the Camden Arts Centre, review

Camden Arts Centre
Pino Pascali began his association with the Arte Povera, the radicalised modern art movement during the Italian worker and student strikes and occupations of the 1960s, between 1967 and 1968. The movement was heavily associated with the social unrest in Italy and promoted the notion of a new type of art that was free of convention and market forces.


It's only when you know this and you know that Pino Pascali's work was itself driven by a desire to question the norms in art and society that it all clicks. I walked around the exhibition first without any prior knowledge of Pino Pascali or of Arte Povera and to be honest I couldn't quite work it out, but I knew there was something important there. I literally stared at the oversized, fuzzy, blue, 6 legged spider for a good ten minutes (while the exhibition lady was probably looking at me thinking, "nutter") before going to read the great little notes and books the Camden Arts Centre has on Pino Pascali outside.


The second time around was a much better pass and the playful critique of art and society shone out in all of the works on display. Sadly, though, as the title says, these were Pascali's final works, as he died later in 1968 in a motorbike accident at the age of 32.


The exhibition is presented well and provides a great insight into Pino Pascali's work and the Arte Povera movement. It's accompanied by SKMP2 (1968), a short film featuring Pascali by artist Luca Patella and other artists from the Arte Povera movement. The best thing about the exhibition is that it forces you to question reality and perception through art, which leads to questions about the norms and conventions of reality at large, from both a political and societal stand point. However, the nature of the exhibition means that there are on 20 or so pieces to see, so there is a scarce feel to it.


Review: 3.7/5

 

© 2009 Tuppence Magazine. All Rights Reserved.

Tuppence entertainment magazine Sitemap

Privacy Policy

Tuppence Magazine UK is an entertainment, news & reviews website that delivers my take and your take on stuff about music news, film release dates & trailers, television, books, computer games, food & drink, politics, theatre, comedy, art and fashion. Send in your reviews.

Home     > Art    > Reviews     > Pino Pascali's Final Works 1967-1968, Camden Arts Centre, review

Art home


  ---------------------------


Art news


  ---------------------------


Art reviews


  ---------------------------


Museum news


  ---------------------------


Museum reviews


Follow Tuppence Magazine on:






Twitter






Facebookhttp://twitter.com/tuppencemaghttp://www.facebook.com/pages/Tuppence-Magazine/418499815297?ref=search&sid=100000637388035.3163739187..1shapeimage_19_link_0shapeimage_19_link_1

Follow Tuppence Magazine on:






Twitter






Facebook