Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy website Baldessari Sings LeWitt | From print to song | Curated by Paola Nicolin
april 26, 2021 - Galleria d'Arte Tommaso Calabro

Baldessari Sings LeWitt | From print to song | Curated by Paola Nicolin


I’d like to sing for you some of the sentences that #sollewitt has written on conceptual art.
I feel this is a tribute to him.
In that, I think that these sentences have been hidden too long in the pages of exhibition catalogues 
and perhaps if I might sing them for you, it would bring these sentences to a much larger public.
I use the same ordering and numbering that he has.
I try to pause between in each statement for clarity and maybe that occasionally 
I’ll have to sing one sentence over more than once and that I might not get the phrasing correct.
#johnbaldessari, from Baldessari Sings LeWitt, 1972

The #galleriadartetommasocalabro is pleased to present From print to song – Baldessari Sings LeWitt, an exhibition dedicated to American artists #johnbaldessari (1931–2020) and #sollewitt (1928–2007), running from May 14 through July 10, 2021. A dialogue between two giants of #contemporaryart investigating the communal transient nature of the artistic medium, the exhibition is the second chapter of a series of projects curated by #paolanicolin investigating the relationship between art and the project.

In 1972, #johnbaldessari performed Baldessari Sings LeWitt, a videotape where the artist, sitting in a chair and clutching a sheaf of papers, sings the 35 Sentences on Conceptual Art – the manifesto of conceptual art #sollewitt wrote in 1968 – to the tune of popular songs. The idea of this exhibition, which originates from the possibility to recall the dialogue and exchange between the two artists starting with the 1972 video, presents a selection of works showing the different yet similar sensibilities that guided LeWitt and Baldessari in their lifelong pursuit of art as project.

As Baldessari himself recalled, he first met #sollewitt when visiting his studio in New York at the end of the Sixties. He was struck by LeWitt’s photographs of ordinary objects, by “his idea of having a strategy or ground rules to follow” (John Baldessari, “Sol LeWitt: Songs My Mother Never Taught me”, in #sollewitt 100 Views, Mass Moca, Yale University Press, 2009) and his way of turning art into a project on art. The encounter with LeWitt shaped Baldessari’s way of constructing a theoretical discourse through visual research and of conceiving artistic practice as a tireless investigation of images that become text and vice versa.

LeWitt’s structures, drawings and writings built a foundational baggage for an aesthetic and ethic that, for over fifty years, has encouraged reflection on the gist of art, which, in his introduction to Baldessari Sings LeWitt, Baldessari defined as “the transformation of material from one medium to another, from print to song”. The work of both LeWitt and Baldessari results from a conception of the artist as creator of ideas – a “thinker”– rather than as creator of shapes – “a craftsman.”

“If one used an analogy to music, this would place the artist in the role of a composer rather than player,” LeWitt affirmed (Sol LeWitt, “Progressive Colors four Walls”, 1970, in #sollewitt, The Museum of Modern Art, 1978). In regard to both Baldessari and LeWitt one can speak of inventories, lists, series, annotations and notes, as well as of visible and invisible, combinations and schemes that allow for a multi-layered perception of the artwork. The interaction between text and image, or, as exemplified in Baldessari Sings LeWitt, between sound and text speaks, on the one side, of Baldessari’s interest in marginality and manipulations of found images to create new narratives; on the other, it speaks of LeWitt’s research for a conceptual structure that produces sign variations.

From these premises, From print to song – Baldessari Sings LeWitt will orchestrate works by #sollewitt and #johnbaldessari side by side across the gallery rooms, alternating grids and lines to images and texts. A selection of LeWitt’s drawings, gouaches, sculptures, books and artist multiples, including Muybridge I (Schematic Representation) from 1964 and examples of the $100 drawings, will converse with prints, photographs, multiples and videos by Baldessari, including Baldessari Sings LeWitt, from which the exhibition unfolds, and Teaching a Plant the Alphabet, also from 1972.

Such a dialogue will visualize the impact of both artists in expanding the understanding of conceptual art, beyond its exclusive cerebral reading towards the inclusion of a sense of play, absurd, irony and, at times, irreverence.

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