Michelangelo Pistoletto: From One to Many, 1956–1974 at the PMA

Installation shot of the early mirror painting

It started with a mirror painting, like one of those above, when I first became enchanted with Michelangelo Pistoletto’s work. This retrospective of his career, currently at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through January 16, argues for an appreciation of the artist’s varied and influential career on the whole, and quite successfully. The early works above remain my favorites of the artist: scenes from life featuring Pistolletos’ friends in typical poses and then unmoored from their surroundings by being placed on a mirror.

Early painting, self portrait
A rare early painting attempts the same effect: to take a familiar subject, in this case himself, and while keeping the trappings of the present day with suits, cigarettes, or what not, utterly remove from any situation or outside realty by a glowing flat background. Its a way of looking for the eternal in the everyday.

Here you can see the detailed shading on this man’s face compared to the shiny surface of the mirror. Pistolleto, working from photographs, would cut silhouettes out of tissue paper and paint then very delicately before affixing them to the mirrors he polished.  
Me, with Three Girls on a Balcony

The tissue he painted on has not always aged well, like the spots across the middle girl’s back that you can see here. I love how looking at these mirror paintings is also interacting with them and taking a place in the tableau.

Pistolleto began to take the photographs as guides, for example coloring in this girl’s skirt a bright red. 
  
But they aren’t all mirror paintings. Above, next to another mirror painting, is one of Pistolleto’s plexiglass works. Like with the mirror paintings, he tries to find the essence of the thing. Between two sheets of plexiglass, a trimmed photograph of an electrical plug rests. It flirts with materiality even as it remains a flat image.
Ogetti in menu installation view, 1960s

Pistoletto also created sculptures that he called Ogetti in menu, or minus objects, because they were made from parts of a whole. Sometimes Pistolleto used these in his growing performance art that was widely influential, as he did some of the rag works below.

Venus in Rags
Stracci (rags) developed along with Pistoletto’s performance art in the late 1960s. Venus in Rags was originally used as part of a performance. The rags were those he had used to polish his mirror — actually stainless steel — paintings. Arte povera, much?


 Later he continued to create his mirror paintings, but changed how he created the image. Switiching to silkscreen, Pistoletto was able to create bright, photo-realistic images. In many of them a darker element, not present in the early portraits, appears like the jail bars above or the chain face to the left saying “Periculo de morte” (Danger of Death).

Frida Kahlo, and Me, at MoMA

Me with Frida in Fulang-Chang and I

I took this picture at the MoMA the other day. I really do LIKE Frida Kahlo, even while I think she is over hyped. Fulang-Chang and I depicts Kahlo with one of her pet monkeys. The painting was included in the first major exhibition of her work in New York in 1938 to much attention. Later Kahlo gave the painting to her close friend Mary Sklar, attaching a mirror to it so that, if Sklar chose, the two friends could be together.

And of course, I love inserting myself into other people’s art; see Pistoletti and Kiki Smith.

Image from the museum’s website, so you can see the painting better:

Maggie Tobin’s Luminous Treetops

 Green

I found Maggie Tobin through Art In Brookyn–always nice to have hyperlocal resources–and the artist maes some lovely images of tree branches, displaced and translucent. It reminds me of lying on your back in the grass and looking up to see the such shine through branches, all black in thick relief.

Tobin notes how she captures such a deep yet luminous effect in her artist’s statement:

The trees are painted in oil on translucent vellum stretched over mirror creating a subtle luminous quality and 3-dimensional effect. I try to capture the sublime quality of the Hudson River Luminists as well as the sense of limitless space in twelfth century Chinese Southern Sung landscapes. Within my paintings there are no cultural references; I aim to reflect the timelessness of nature in a fleeting moment.

Fontenelle

The subject matter and the medium really work well together here. AND The artist’s website features flipbooks (fun!) and other goodies.