STEFANO SCHEDA
NUDO, MANI IN ALTO! NAKED, HANDS UP!
17 January to 19 June 2020
STEFANO SCHEDA
NUDO, MANI IN ALTO! NAKED, HANDS UP!
17 January to 19 June 2020
Text
A publication with texts by selected authors including Angela Madesani (art historian and curator), Matteo Bonazzi (philosopher and psychoanalyst), Annamaria Maggi and Cristiano Seganfreddo will accompany the exhibition.
Visitors will be invited to take part in a sociological survey by answering a questionnaire written by Matteo Bonazzi.
(Faenza, 1957). “Nudo, mani in alto! Naked, hands up!” is an invitation to reflect on concept of nudity, from art history to social networks. New works along with historical pieces are presented in an exhibition layout purposely left in half-light. On the opening night the performance INERTE/INERME will take place. «Why is nobody shocked by the Riace bronzes, why is nobody horrified in front of Michelangelo’s David or of the male nudes of neoclassic art whereas Same same but different, the work by Stefano Scheda with two naked men coming out of water and greeting each other, creates such a concern in those who see it? Why do social media ban it? Why does it raise public complain?». These are the questions that prompted the invite to Stefano Scheda to conceive an exhibition project for Galleria Fumagalli spaces and which introduce the text written by Angela Madesani – collected together with other critical contributions in a book in course of publication. Stefano Scheda’s work is often characterized by the use of the nude, meant not in an erotic or voyeuristic turn but in its social outcomes.
The title of the exhibition “Nudo, mani in alto! Naked, hands up!” deliberately refers to a body exposed to weaknesses and life complications, a body that is not protected even by clothes. «We are all bare in physical and spiritual vulnerability, but not certain of a brotherhood» – explains Stefano Scheda. Nudity, which is observed in the first encounter with the work, does not end with the exposition of a naked body and constitutes only the first grade of staging of the human condition. The observers are invited to question and test their own threshold of tolerance in front of a nude physique that, caught by the artist’s ironic eye, shows a sublimated and archetypical image of the body. On display the video Meteo (2004), presented for the first time at the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe in 2006: naked bodies of men and women, not completely in focus, appear still on a shoreline with round mirrors at their stomachs height. Two disturbing elements, the sunlight reflected from the glasses and the sound of machine guns coming from a space capsule, act on the scene by creating an annoying and alienating effect. In this work nudity is evocative of the human limit in front of the greatness of historical and natural events, and in the photographic diptych Same same but different (2018) is captured in its innocence and purity portraying the bodies where the sea meets the earth. In and out of this confine, water is for the artist symbolic of the hope for a rebirth, as the title of the sculpture Terramare (2015), made with a tire and an air chamber, also evokes. The precariousness of being is expressed equally by the image photographed in Figura I (1996), a naked body that seems to surrender to life: “hands up”.
Stefano Scheda, born in Faenza in 1957, lives in Bologna where teaches “Strategia dell’Invenzione” (“Invention Strategy”) at the Academy of Fine Arts. His research is aimed at capturing the gaps of reality without altering its objective appearance rather exposing its frictions, the “somewhere else”. The ambiguity of real and illusory images is revealed in the works of the artist often evoking a sense of estrangement in the observer, as in the case of the photographic series that portray buildings dressed by vegetation or embracing the landscape in mirrored doors and windows. The mirror as a reflecting surface and the water, the sea, as an archetype of the threshold of life and death are recurrent elements in the research on the relationships between body, architecture and landscape. These connections, which the artist captures in image, reveal ways of speculation on the perception of reality and make its dialectical process visible. The nude human body, devoid of erotic connotations, seizes corporeality as a combined spatial element, as an “image within the image”, in the same way as mirrors reflect what lies ahead. Stefano Scheda is the founder of “Marradi Campana Infesta”. The art event reaches its seventh edition in 2020. People of Marradi encounter the students of the Bologna Academy of Fine Arts, artists and thinkers invited to discuss different topics, maintaining an elective relationship with the marradese poet Dino Campana.
Text
A publication with texts by selected authors including Angela Madesani (art historian and curator), Matteo Bonazzi (philosopher and psychoanalyst), Annamaria Maggi and Cristiano Seganfreddo will accompany the exhibition.
Visitors will be invited to take part in a sociological survey by answering a questionnaire written by Matteo Bonazzi.
(Faenza, 1957). “Nudo, mani in alto! Naked, hands up!” is an invitation to reflect on concept of nudity, from art history to social networks. New works along with historical pieces are presented in an exhibition layout purposely left in half-light. On the opening night the performance INERTE/INERME will take place. «Why is nobody shocked by the Riace bronzes, why is nobody horrified in front of Michelangelo’s David or of the male nudes of neoclassic art whereas Same same but different, the work by Stefano Scheda with two naked men coming out of water and greeting each other, creates such a concern in those who see it? Why do social media ban it? Why does it raise public complain?». These are the questions that prompted the invite to Stefano Scheda to conceive an exhibition project for Galleria Fumagalli spaces and which introduce the text written by Angela Madesani – collected together with other critical contributions in a book in course of publication. Stefano Scheda’s work is often characterized by the use of the nude, meant not in an erotic or voyeuristic turn but in its social outcomes.
The title of the exhibition “Nudo, mani in alto! Naked, hands up!” deliberately refers to a body exposed to weaknesses and life complications, a body that is not protected even by clothes. «We are all bare in physical and spiritual vulnerability, but not certain of a brotherhood» – explains Stefano Scheda. Nudity, which is observed in the first encounter with the work, does not end with the exposition of a naked body and constitutes only the first grade of staging of the human condition. The observers are invited to question and test their own threshold of tolerance in front of a nude physique that, caught by the artist’s ironic eye, shows a sublimated and archetypical image of the body. On display the video Meteo (2004), presented for the first time at the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe in 2006: naked bodies of men and women, not completely in focus, appear still on a shoreline with round mirrors at their stomachs height. Two disturbing elements, the sunlight reflected from the glasses and the sound of machine guns coming from a space capsule, act on the scene by creating an annoying and alienating effect. In this work nudity is evocative of the human limit in front of the greatness of historical and natural events, and in the photographic diptych Same same but different (2018) is captured in its innocence and purity portraying the bodies where the sea meets the earth. In and out of this confine, water is for the artist symbolic of the hope for a rebirth, as the title of the sculpture Terramare (2015), made with a tire and an air chamber, also evokes. The precariousness of being is expressed equally by the image photographed in Figura I (1996), a naked body that seems to surrender to life: “hands up”.
Stefano Scheda, born in Faenza in 1957, lives in Bologna where teaches “Strategia dell’Invenzione” (“Invention Strategy”) at the Academy of Fine Arts. His research is aimed at capturing the gaps of reality without altering its objective appearance rather exposing its frictions, the “somewhere else”. The ambiguity of real and illusory images is revealed in the works of the artist often evoking a sense of estrangement in the observer, as in the case of the photographic series that portray buildings dressed by vegetation or embracing the landscape in mirrored doors and windows. The mirror as a reflecting surface and the water, the sea, as an archetype of the threshold of life and death are recurrent elements in the research on the relationships between body, architecture and landscape. These connections, which the artist captures in image, reveal ways of speculation on the perception of reality and make its dialectical process visible. The nude human body, devoid of erotic connotations, seizes corporeality as a combined spatial element, as an “image within the image”, in the same way as mirrors reflect what lies ahead. Stefano Scheda is the founder of “Marradi Campana Infesta”. The art event reaches its seventh edition in 2020. People of Marradi encounter the students of the Bologna Academy of Fine Arts, artists and thinkers invited to discuss different topics, maintaining an elective relationship with the marradese poet Dino Campana.
Installation views
Installation views
Video
Video
Press
espoarte.net
25 March 2020
“Stefano Scheda: mettere a nudo la misura della tolleranza”
artslife.com
19 January 2020
“Nudo, mani in alto! Tra realtà, social e vulnerabilità.
Stefano Scheda a Milano”
la Repubblica | ed. Milano
16 January 2020
“Le riflessioni sul nudo di Stefano Scheda”
Press
espoarte.net
25 March 2020
“Stefano Scheda: mettere a nudo la misura della tolleranza”
artslife.com
19 January 2020
“Nudo, mani in alto! Tra realtà, social e vulnerabilità.
Stefano Scheda a Milano”
la Repubblica | ed. Milano
16 January 2020
“Le riflessioni sul nudo di Stefano Scheda”