Salvo at Gladstone
64 , Lenox Hill
Until Saturday February 29 2020
Gladstone
Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings by Salvo (1947 –
2015). Focusing on the artist’s compositions of landscapes and cities, this
show surveys more than 30 years of Salvo’s artistic practice and highlights his
early conceptual art and his astounding aptitude for portraying the
complexities of light and the passage of time. Organized in collaboration with
Archivio Salvo, the works in this show solidify Salvo’s singular and ever
explorative approach to artmaking and his lasting impact on Italian modernism.
Salvo,
whose given name was Salvatore Mangione, was born in Leonforte, Sicily, in
1947. After permanently relocating to his adoptive city of Turin in 1968, he
quickly became involved in the blossoming Arte Povera movement, which was born
as a response to the social and political unrest in Italy throughout the 1960s.
During this period, Salvo shared a studio with Alighiero Boetti, one of the
pioneers of this radical movement. Salvo and Boetti had an ongoing relationship
and reciprocally collaborative influence on each other’s practices; the
combination of influences from Boetti and other artists of the time impacted
Salvo’s own artmaking and understanding of the world around him. At this early
stage in his career, Salvo employed conceptual strategies to meditate on the
nature of artistic practice, and the role of the artist as both a
preternaturally talented individual and a conduit to the past and the history
of culture. An example of works from this period include a series of
“self-portraits” - altered or staged photographs that depicted him as a baker,
bartender, guerilla, saint, and the painter Raphael. By 1973, Salvo pivoted
away from conceptual work and began to explore the radical and complex
possibilities inherent to figurative painting.
Venue name:
Gladstone 64
Venue
website: www.gladstone64.com
Venue
phone: 212-753-2200
Address:
130 E 64th St New York 10065