Enrico David at Gió Marconi

Artist: Enrico David

Exhibition title: Cielo di giugno

Venue: Giò Marconi, Milan, Italy

Date: February 9 – March 20, 2021

Photography: images copyright and courtesy of the artist and Giò Marconi, Milan

Gió Marconi is pleased to announce Cielo di giugno, Enrico David’s first solo show at the gallery.

The work in the exhibition manifests a distinctive pull towards both lightness and a craving for the horizon, in part following the and reacting to David’s Venice experience: original material such as notes, drafts and drawings that are typically at the core of all of his work were conceived during the conceptual stages of the Italian Pavilion at the 58th Venice Biennial. Cielo di giugno marks a threshold in David’s practice, in that it is his first exhibition composed exclusively of graphic works, of “beginnings” and “clues” which in different circumstances would have migrated to other media and modes of expression. The sequence of works, oscillating between proximity and distance, sinking and gliding, underlines David’s position as a painter and finds its pretext in an exteriority made of air and atmosphere, dust motes and light, waning wind and twilight, the sun, the moon and endless vistas. The act of observing is equal to sitting on a clod of earth – or on an unlikely bench, waiting for irreducible remains. Here the horizon is the utopia that Edoardo Galeano describes as a kind of tension: drawing us closer but inevitably shifting further away, its only purpose being to allow us to move forward.

The exhibition comprises three groups of paintings. On the shorter walls of the space two works are being displayed which function as an imaginary parenthesis, facing each other and enclosing their content. Il fraterno silenzio del fango (2020) and Zattera viva (2020) are two large canvases which, like an architecture, form a supporting structure for the other works and represent the trellis onto which all the rest is fixed, entangled: kites, hovering in a light that no longer conveys matter, and with their eternal melancholic dream they yield to their fall. Or rafts, whose color blends and dissolves, and whose customary harmony – both reflective and meditative – holds earth and sky together, the material and the incorporeal, on the verge of dissolving. In contrast, the small canvases are virtually studies, compositions which, like riddles, explore the possibility of painting, or how to paint in the least pictorially possible way.

Bassa marea al molo, Fossa madre,  Cielo trema o niente, Punti di fiamma, Salvezza trovata  in cielo, together with the exhibition’s  title  piece  Cielo di giugno  (all works 2020) reveal  the  unfolding  of  the  images  at  a  faster  pace,  with  the  excited  gesture  of something happening or  about  to  happen: instants  that  spin  around before falling back on themselves, sowing signs  of sentiment. The  work evokes a  sculptural feel that  refers  to  natural  elements  such  as  grass,  bamboo  canes,  mud,  materials frequently  found  in  Enrico  David’s  work.

The gallery walls are painted in the  same natural tone as the  canvases in  order to enhance  the  materiality  –  or  its  absence  –  of  the  pictorial  surface. Cielo di  giugno, Acrab’s  sky, the  “lady  of the  blue”.  Beyond the  past  spring  never lived, beyond  the  encounter  of human transience and nature’s  unperturbed cycle, beyond this  endless winter, summer fades away  and what remains is an  unsettling tenderness.

An  essay  by  Rita  Selvaggio  accompanies  the  exhibition.

Enrico  David  (b.  1966,  Ancona,  Italy).  He  currently  lives  and  works  in  London.

Recent exhibitions include: Gradations of Slow Release, MCA, Chicago, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, USA (2019); 58th Venice Biennale, Italian Pavilion curated by Milovan Farronato, Venice, Italy (2019); Fault Work, Sharjah Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE (2016); Autoparent, Lismore Castle Arts, Lismore, Ireland (2016); The Hepworth Wakefield, West Yorkshire, UK (2015); Maramotti Collection, Reggio Emilia, Italy (2015); UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, USA (2013); 55th Venice Biennale curated by Massimiliano Gioni, Venice,

Italy (2013); Head Gas, New Museum, New York, USA (2011); Repertorio Ornamentale, Bevilacqua La Masa Foundation, Venice, Italy (2011); How Do You Love Dzzzzt by Mammy?, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel, Switzerland (2009); Bulbous Marauder, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, USA (2008); Ultra Paste, ICA, London, UK (2007) and 50th Venice Biennale curated by Francesco Bonami, Venice, Italy (2003).

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Cielo di giugno, installation view, Gió Marconi, Milan, 2021

Enrico David, Da già non più ad ancora qui, già non più, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 85 x 60 x 2 cm

Enrico David, Da già non più ad ancora qui, ancora qui, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 85 x 60 x 2 cm

Enrico David, Fossa madre, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 185 x 110 x 2 cm

Enrico David, Cielo di Giugno, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 224 x 270 x 3 cm

Enrico David, Punti di fiamma, salvezza trovata in cielo, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 225 x 229 x 3 cm

Enrico David, Cielo trema o niente, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 239 x 272 x 3 cm

Enrico David, Zattera Viva, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 279 x 543 x 3 cm

Enrico David, Bassa marea al molo, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 160 x 130 x 2 cm

Enrico David, Untitled, 2020, Graphite, colored pencil on paper, 42 x 29.5 cm, 65 x 53 x 2.2 cm (framed)

Enrico David, Untitled (Tasha), 2020, Graphite, colored pencil on paper, 42 x 29.5 cm, 65 x 53 x 2.2 cm (framed)

Enrico David, Untitled (After Boccioni), 2020, Graphite, colored pencil on paper, 42 x 29.5 cm, 65 x 53 x 2.2 cm (framed)

Enrico David, Untitled (Bonnie), 2020, Graphite, colored pencil on paper, 42 x 29.5 cm, 65 x 53 x 2.2 cm (framed)

Enrico David, Il Fraterno silenzio del Fango, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 278 x 447 x 3 cm