Long live the revolution

Paolo Buggiani, Hiroshima, United Nations, New York City, 1982 | Photo ©  Jennifer Cotter

 

From 02 Dicembre 2017 to 20 Gennaio 2018

Rome

Place: Wunderkammern Rome

Address: Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124

Times: Tue - Sat 4 - 7 pm | For appointments please call +39 3498112973

Responsibles: Giuseppe Ottavianelli

Organizers:

  • Patrocinio istituzionale del Municipio Roma V

Ticket price: Free entrance

Telefono per informazioni: +39 06 4543 5662

E-Mail info: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net

Official site: http://www.wunderkammern.net


Wunderkammern is pleased to present Long live the revolution, collective exhibition by the artists Tomaso Binga, Paolo Buggiani, Richard Hambleton, Keith Haring and Ken Hiratsuka.
Exhibited at Wunderkammern Rome for the first time, artworks by great masters who have marked contemporary art history, thanks to their will to think outside the box: Tomaso Binga (Salerno, Italy, 1931); Paolo Buggiani (Castelfiorentino, Italy, 1933); Keith Haring (Reading, USA, 1958-1990); Richard Hambleton (Vancouver, Canada, 1954-2017) and Ken Hiratsuka (Shimodate, Japan, 1959).
Art revolution: that is the motto Paolo Buggiani has appropriated by indelibly impressing it on his skin with a tattoo. For the Tuscan artist, revolution is a necessary act to change a static situation, an explosive gesture whose final aim is to bring progress. Rebellion, thought as a subversion of a static order, is the driving force for every artist featured in the show. Artworks exhibited in Long live the revolution are connected with each other by a scheme which repeats with different procedures: they are thought to surprise viewers, to astonish them by catching their attention, leading them to a reflection and, in a desirable way, to a felt and deep awareness of the necessity of change. This is present in Buggiani’s New York performances, such as the ones where the artist dressed up as Icarus and roller skated through cars in the traffic causing amazement (and sometimes anger) amongst drivers. Or in Binga’s works, which aimed to dismantle the hateful aspects of patriarchy, firmly rooted in Italian culture (and not only) by using her body as connecting tool between declaimed words and involved spectators. A similar need for change could be found in interventions full of sociopolitical messages made by Keith Haring on advertising posters in New York’s subway. In the same metropolis, Urban Shadows by Hambleton surprised passers-by in unexpected street corners. The sensation of “necessary revolution” can be felt also in Hiratsuka’s apparently endless lines, which seem to enclose the entire humanity with no distinction of sex, ethnicity or religion, bringing together human beings in a unique, universal form of communication. Historical artworks are exhibited together with recent works.

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