Mario Merz (January 1, 1925
– 9 November 2003) was an Italian
artist.
Early life
Born in
Milan
, Merz started drawing during World War II, when he was imprisoned for his
activities with the Giustizia e Libertà
antifascist group. He experimented with a continuous graphic
stroke–not removing his pencil point from the paper. He explored
the relationship between nature and the subject, until he had his
first exhibitions in the intellectually incendiary context of Turin
in the 1950s, a cultural climate fed by such writers as
Pavese,
Vittorini, and
Ezra Pound.
Works
Merz discarded abstract expressionism’s subjectivity in favor of
opening art to exterior space: a seed or a leaf in the wind becomes
a universe on his canvas. At the turn of the decade, these
paintings echoed his desire to explore the transmission of energy
from the organic to the inorganic, a curiosity that lead him to
create works in which neon lights pierced everyday object, such as
an umbrella, a glass, a bottle or his own raincoat. Without ever
using ready-made objects as "things" (at least to the extent that
the Nouveau Realistes in France did), Merz and his companions drew
the guiding lines of a renewed life for Italian art in the global
context.
Merz
became fascinated by architecture: he admired the
skyscraper-builders of New York City
; his father was an architect; and his art thereby
conveys a sensitivity for the unity of space and the human residing
therein. He made big spaces feel human, intimate and
natural. He was intrigued by the powerful (Wagner, D’annunzio) as
well as the small (a seed that will generate a tree or the shape of
a leaf) and applied both to his drawing.
In the 1960s, Merz’s work with energy, light and matter placed him
in the movement that
Germano Celant
named
Arte Povera, which, together with
Futurism, remains one of the most
influential movements of Italian art in the 20th century. In 1968
Merz began work on his famous igloos, revealing the prehistoric and
tribal features hidden within the present time and space. The neon
words on his igloos are hallmark Italian phraseology: like "rock
‘n’ roll," they have the power of being the more than catch phrases
or slogans, but the voice of his time in history.
Merz said:
"Space is curved, the earth is curved, everything on earth is
curved" and subsequently produced large curvilinear installations
like the one at the Guggenheim
in New York. These last works are formally
transcendent and unusually light. His site-specific works in
archaeological sites redeem spaces from touristy tedium with a
single neon line, which serves as source of aesthetic inspiration.
He had the wild, immediate perceptiveness of a child. His works
encapsulate this nature together with an uncanny universality and
versatility.
He died at
Turin
in 2003.
Contributions
- Life on Mars, the 2008 Carnegie International
[220040]
External links