Captures a vibrant movement in Italian art in the 1950s, through the innovative works of three leading artists: Alberto Burri, Lucio Fontana and Piero Manzoni.
Fontana described the Ova as signifying 'the infinite, the inconceivable chaos, the end of figuration, nothingness'. July — October: the Italian critic Enrico Crispolti organizes Omaggio a Fontana, the first major retrospective devoted ...
Artwork by Lucio Fontana. Contributions by Enrico Crispolti.
This exhibition catalog and collection is designed to provide the public with a better understanding and appreciation of an artist who, amongst the Masters and avant-garde movements of the twentieth...
Organized by curator Luca Massimo Barbero of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Lucio Fontana: Venice/New York catalogues the artist's first exhibition in the U.S. since the Guggenheim's landmark 1977 retrospective.
Il volume, che accompagna la panoramica curata da Enrico Crispolti presso la Ben Brown Fine Arts Gallery di Londra (7 febbraio-24 marzo 2005), presenta una selezione di sculture, opere su...
Werk van de Italiaanse avantgardekunstenaar (1899-1968).
For the first time in the US, Lucio Fontana Ambienti Spaziali presents a substantial number of the spatial environments conceived by the artist between 1948 and 1968, works that can be regarded as forerunners of the environments created by ...
Lucio Fontana: Sculpture is published in conjunction with the first U.S. museum exhibition dedicated solely to the artist's groundbreaking ceramic work, and explores the innovative and often contrarian ways in which Fontana made use of the ...
Lucio Fontana, 1899-1968, a Retrospective: Exhibition , The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City
Fontana (1899-1968) radically transformed the conception of painting, sculpture, and space by transcending the two-dimensionality of the canvas, foreshadowing many movements of the 1960s and '70s.