Exhibition

Giuseppe Caccavale - New Project

25 Apr 2008 – 23 May 2008

Save Event: Giuseppe Caccavale - New Project

I've seen this

People who have saved this event:

close

Faggionato

London, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • Green Park
Directions via Google Maps Directions via Citymapper
Event map

About

aggionato Fine Arts is pleased to announce the opening of their third exhibition by the Italian artist Giuseppe Caccavale. The show opens opens on 25 April until 23 May 2008. The work of Caccavale holds certain ritualistic and almost devotional aspects at its core. Labour intensive and process driven, every stage reflects the restraint of discipline. Whether working with pastel, fresco, or glass, nothing is improvised or left to chance; his processes are as controlled as those of an architect, the making is ordered and built step by step. The images do not evolve through free gesture and the accidental, but rather via a determined intention, a vision that must be presented in its whole form. For this exhibition Caccavale presents a project in which he explores the idea of communication and the relationships we have with each other. The same four subjects appear again and again in different materials: wood, stucco, graphite and pastel. A dog, a fish, two fighting teenagers and a resting couple act as agents for the artist's expression. In contrast with many of the complex images that emerge from our contemporary society, Caccavale takes inspiration and confidence from the simple and the humble. It is his intention to remove himself as the artist from any involvement with the viewer, he sees himself as the executor, not the author. In this way he hopes that we will learn to see again in the most direct fashion. During the process of his practice, the forms of his subjects are simplified and their volumes exaggerated. Objects and figures are given little perspective or expression, their identity remains invisible. Through this absence of expression they take on an innocence and an aura reminiscent of mythical characters, they are familiar and yet unfamiliar, bound to each other but disparate, communicating only through looking. Caccavale is not concerned with the reportage and visualization of his era; his reaction to the dis-orientation of our contemporary age is to present us with an enigma.

What to expect? Toggle

Comments

Have you been to this event? Share your insights and give it a review below.