The Comune of Pietrasanta advertise the
town as Citta d’Arte. For centuries it was the Italian centre for carving and
casting religious art. The skills for this can still be found with the artisans who
live and work here today. As the demand
for religious art declined modern artists started to come here to have work cast
in bronze or carved in Marble, 40 years ago you might have bumped into Henry Moore, Jacques Lipchitz or Noguchi
in the town. The town was then a working
town, studio space and living accommodation was cheap and few tourists visited.
When I first visited 12 years ago it was
already in decline as a working town, since then the decline has continued
rapidly. The Comune has had a policy of
forcing the small marble studios to move out of town and allowing development of the empty properties.
As the population of artists decreases the
tourist population increases and today in summer almost every property in the
main streets of the town becomes either a restaurant or a chic art gallery.
The Piazza, Pietrasanta, Tuscany, Italy |
It has one of the most beautiful Piazzas in
the whole of Italy. Through a
collaboration of the Comune and gallery owners the Piazza hosts exhibitions
of large pieces of sculpture by well known sculptors throughout the
year.
Currently in the Piazza is an exhibition of work by well known sculptors that
has been made in the town by the studios. .Igor Mitoraj
The new Mitoraj above the main door of San Agostino |
A Close up of the new work by Mitoraj |
A fallen angel by Igor Mitoraj |
I am afraid I find Mitoraj's nostalgic fake antiquities have a built in sterility. There is nothing about them other than their sense of presence, which admittedly can be very strong, but there is no real engagement with the language of sculpture, nothing to excite me in the way that a simple line of Picasso or a space in a Chilida sculpture can.
Fernando Botero
Jimenez Deredia
A sculpture by Jimenez Deredia
Another sculptor is the
Costa Rican Jimenez Deredia, who also tends to use very bulbous forms, which
like Bottero offer rather boring linear profiles lacking in tension and giving poor
relationships of the various masses.
Rabarama
A sculpture by Rabarama |
Rabarama, is a very
successful female Italian sculptor with large figurative works that can be found in
cities all over the world. The following
is a quote from her very slick website
“The artist’s subjects mostly have absent gazes, blanked out by crystallized research which is conditioned by a world governed purely by cause-effect relationships, whose common denominator is the standardized programming of the species”
There you have it!!!
What all these sculptors have in common is
that they have their work made in Pietrasanta by an army of highly skilled
artisans. But for me there is more to
sculpture than just techniques and skill and I love to see work that explores,
that tries to push the boundaries of the sculptural language. One person’s honest
struggle with ideas of form, line, planes, space and masses is much more
exciting than all the grand gesturing of these large sculptures.
Kan Yasuda - Chiave del Sogno |
Here is one that I do like. I love the contrast of the loosely flowing outer line with the tightness of the inner line and the very subtleway it sits on the ground.
Interesting to see your thoughts written down. I think there are many people who would agree with you. But there are also a majority who don't understand the language of sculpture. They are impressed by things that have a big physical presence and they either like pleasing shapes, or they enjoy being shocked and challenged.
ReplyDeleteI also lament the decline of the town as a 'city of art'. As its tourist profile increases, so do the prices - and artists and writers can no longer afford to live and work there. So its status gradually disappears. I can see that happening to Pietrasanta. There used to be so many marble studios, but they're all closed. Sad.