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Solo Cose Belle at Acappella

Artists: Daphne Ahlers, Vittorio Brodmann, Daniel Faust, Lilli Thießen

Exhibition title: Solo Cose Belle

Curated by: Tenzing Barshee

Venue: Acappella, Naples, Italy

Date: April 28 – July 10, 2017

Photography: all images copyright and courtesy of the artists and Acappella, Naples

Acappella is happy to announce the 0irst exhibition in collaboration with Spazio Artisti, artists residency program in Pozzuoli, Naples.

My mouth was black and open. I was afraid that the half-­‐sentence, I had just spoken, would 0ly like aboomerang,rightbackbetweenmylips.(…)Theideawassomehowseismological,abstractand emotional, but also concrete because we were spending our month in Pozzuoli, walking the Phlegraean Fields, near Naples, sitting on a collapsed caldera, near the Solfatara, a site known for its fumaroles: steaming, sulphuric breaths. “It’s the Earth exhaling,” he had explained, paternalistically adding a “you know” at the end of every one of his silly little sentences.

– April 2017, Pozzuoli

The legend speaks of the dead body of a young woman that was found in the river Seine around 1880 and it is believed that she committed suicide. Because she remained anonymous, her face was turned into a putative death mask, so that someone might recognize her. In search of her identity, her face became an image and was made public. To this day, this image became something like a centuries-­‐old meme that was reproduced, idealized and distributed. Her smile was compared to that of the Mona Lisa. “L’Inconnue de la Seine” became popular as an image because it was deemed beautiful. Over time, her unknown fate was the image that became stylized, misconstrued and subject to a great variety of literary and other projections. These projections originated mostly from male perspectives. In the United States, the mask is also known as “La Belle Italienne”. Simply, because she was immersed in an image of beauty, soaking her over and over again.

For her sculpture “Never Let Jealousy Threaten Female Bonds”, Daphne Ahlers used the mask of the unknown woman from the Seine to address different issues. She cast the mask in latex 0ive times, colored in seaweed green and bound together by long braids of nylon-­‐made hair, which themselves suggest the passing of time as it takes awhile for hair to grow that far down. Even though the image of the unknown woman from the Seine was reduced to an image that was alienated from her actual face as many times as her story must have been misinterpreted—which made her vanish all over again—, she was also never released, as the artist points out, and if she really committed suicide, she made the conscious decision to disappear, which suggests that she wanted to be let go but, for centuries, no one ever would.

Bringing together the works of its four artists, this exhibition raises the question of beauty or the use of beautiful things with a smile and a rivel, causing anxiety and comfort alike. For example, when Lilli Thießen uses natural materials, referring to geographic locations and historic events, for visual purposes, sometimes bordering on the decorative. She takes the colors for her abstract compositions from sea shells or uses sand to frame a painting, materials which she collected on beaches in the US and in Normandy. How we can reconsider what’s already been historicized when Daniel Faust reframes obscure museum objects and questions, what we put on display and for what purpose. Or when Vittorio Brodmann considers that painting has past the point of having to address beauty, simply, because the question has become an intrinsic aspect of the medium itself.

– Tenzing Barshee

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Daphne Ahlers, Shortest way to confidence, 2017

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Vittorio Brodmann, Untitled, 2017, gouche and poster color on paper, 32x24cm

Vittorio Brodmann, Usual Bounty, 2017, acrylic and oil on canvas, 19 x 24cm

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Vittorio Broadmann, Slow Pollution, 2017, Oil on canvas, 60x47cm

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Daphne Ahlers, Turisti Sputati, 2017, denim, neoprene, latex, styrofoam, metal and dried flowers, variable dimension

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Daphne Ahlers, Never Let Jealousy Threaten Female Bonds, 2017, 100 cm x 62 cm

Lilli Thießen, Gemischte Gefühle, 2016-2017, acrylic, papermache, foam, canvas

Lilli Thießen, Gemischte Gefühle, 2016-2017, acrylic, papermache, foam, canvas

Lilli Thießen, Gemischte Gefühle, 2016-2017, acrylic, papermache, foam, canvas

Lilli Thießen, Gemischte Gefühle, 2016-2017, acrylic, papermache, foam, canvas

Lilli Thießen, Gemischte Gefühle, 2016-2017, acrylic, papermache, foam, canvas

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Daniel Faust, Criminals Hall of Fame Wax Museum, Niagara Falls, 1986, archival pigment photograph, 18 x 29 cm

Lilli Thießens, Filter Feeders, 2016-2017, acrylic, marker and sand on canvas, 80 x 60 cm

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

Vittorio Broadmann, Sporadic Embraces, 2017, acrylic and oil on canvas, 52 x 42 cm

Daniel Faust, Glockenmuseum, Grassmayr, Innsbruck, Austria, 2000, archival pigment photograph, 18 x 29 cm

Vittorio Broadmann, Untitled, 2017, gouche on paper, 30 x 40 cm

Daniel Faust, Exploratorium, San Francisco, 1983, archival pigment photograph, 18 x 29 cm

Daniel Faust, Museo delle Cere, Rome, 1984, archival pigment photograph, 18 x 29 cm

Solo Cose Belle, installation view, 2017, Acappella, Naples

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