Thursday, March 22, 2018

Venice: Casa dei Tre Oci – Fulvio Roiter – Photographs 1948-2007 – Exhibition and After Party


  copyright Fondazione Fulvio Roiter  - courtesy Casa dei Tre Oci

Casa dei Tre Oci
Fulvio Roiter – Photographs 1948-2007
At the Casa dei Tre Oci, Fulvio Roiter – Photographs 1948-2007, curated by Denis Curti, until August 26, is the first retrospective of the great photographer’s work since his death in 2016. Two hundred photographs, vintage for the most part, recount the artistic path of the Venetian photographer.  Promoted by the Fondazione di Venezia, in partnership with the City of Venice, the show ranges over the whole of his career, and is the most complete monographic show ever to be devoted to the artist. This is a tribute and a memento that the Casa dei Tre Oci has dedicated to the photographer who, more than any other, has conjoined the image of Venice to his name.
 Fulvio Roiter
- Acqua Alta in Piazzetta San Marco - 2002





Denis Curti, Lou Embo Roiter, Giovanni Dell’Olivo and Emanuela Bassetti

copyright Fondazione Fulvio Roiter  - courtesy Casa dei Tre Oci

Venice in Black and White
A Self Portrait
The heart and soul of Fulvio Roiter's work was Venice, the city that first invited his eyes to look through a viewfinder in order to bring to light what nobody had seen before. A magical city overflowing with history, the set for a film that had never been released but that soon everyone would want to see by walking along the alleys by the lagoon. His photos had the power of a megaphone and managed to connect the city to the world. In fact, Venice was the research field where Roiter discovered his artistic identity, precisely at the time when the city was being reborn through unusual and attractive images, through photographs that allowed the whole world to get to know its poetry and enchantment.
Fulvio Roiter
- Piazza San Marco - 1980


 
Evelyn and Jessica Roiter, Lou Embo Roiter and
Mattia Bianchi


  Fulvio Roiter – Borges and Lou at the Café Florian – 1983


Luca De Michelis and Denis Curti

 copyright Fondazione Fulvio Roiter  - courtesy Casa dei Tre Oci

Fulvio Roiter
- Squero di San Trovaso - 1970
Venise a Fleur de L’Eau



Chiara Valerio, Ezio Micelli and Cristiana Costanza

  copyright Fondazione Fulvio Roiter  - courtesy Casa dei Tre Oci


Fulvio Roiter - Piazza San Marco - 1983



 
Laura Mancini and Maria Grazia Rosin

copyright Fondazione Fulvio Roiter  - courtesy Casa dei Tre Oci


“The historical idea of Venice was formed and developed in this way even at a political level, from the times of the Most Serene Republic, above all through images that referred to and made known the power of its beauty”.
Italo Zannier
Fulvio Roiter - 
Fondamenta delle Zattere - 1965



Federica Marangoni

 
copyright Fondazione Fulvio Roiter  - courtesy Casa dei Tre Oci

Fulvio Roiter
 - Sulla strada Gela - Niscemi, Sicilia - 1953

 

The After Party
The Fulvio Roiter after party was held in the book clad residence of the De Michelis Venice family home, publishers of the beautiful catalogue Fulvio Roiter Fotografie Photographs 1948-2007Marsilio. There Venetian intellectuals, artists, writers, architects, photographers and entrepreneurs shared the good food, wine and the company.

Emanuela Bassetti and Cesare De Michelis






Fritto Misto and the queen of the house Lina

 
Silvia Dainese and Ugo Camerino


 
Stefano Gris, Adele Re Rebaudengo and Camilla Marolla



Giulia Ghigi and Ziva Kraus

   
Cristina Nardini and Silvana Bice
 
 
Valeria Regazzoni


 
Maria Novella Dei Carraresi, Pierandrea Moro and Blu


Sandrina Rubelli, Claudia Zanchi, Adele Re Rebaudengo and Giulio Manieri Elia

 
Paolo De Benedittis and Elisabetta Capitanio


  Photograph and copyright by Manfredi Bellati

Blu

 
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Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Milano – Palazzo Reale: Italiana: Italy Through the Lens of Fashion, 1971–2001 – Exhibition




 
Milano Milano – Palazzo Reale
Italiana: Italy Through the Lens of Fashion, 1971–2001

At Palazzo Reale, until May 6, Italiana: Italy through the lens of fashion 1971-2001 is a project in the form of an exhibition and a book published by Marsilio, conceived and curated by Maria Luisa Frisa and Stefano Tonchi. Italiana celebrates the Italian fashion system over the seminal three decades in which it cemented relations and exchanges between the members of a generation of designers, industrialists, artists, architects and intellectuals that defined Italy’s image in the world and put it on the map of international culture.
Gucci – Tom Ford – 1996-1997
pinstripe and red velvet -  his and hers trouser suits
L’Uomo Vogue -  “ Unilook - Lui e Lei alla Stessa Maniera”
photograhs - Oliveiro Toscani – December 1971


“This exhibition recounts the evolution not just of fashion but also of Italian society over the period from 1971 to 2001.”
Domenico Piraina - Director of Palazzo Reale
Curators Stefano Tonchi and Maria Luisa Frisa, Carlo Capasa Domenico Piraina
Photograph by Francesco De Luca – courtesy Karla Otto Milan

Diorama Room
A diorama reconstructs a Wunderkammer, exalting and celebrating the virtuoso and perilous relations between objects of fashion and objects of design. It evokes the eclectic and metaphysical landscapes-often the result of the visionary imagination of Occhiomagico and Studio Alchimia, which inhabited the covers and pages of Domus and Domus Moda, the supplement launched by Alessandro Mendini in 1981 to introduce fashion into the debate over the Italian culture of design.

Cinzia Ruggeri – dress with leds – 1982
Gaetano Pesce – Dalilatre for Cassina
 Ettore Sottsass – Ultrafragola for Poltronova 1970-2018
Krizia – pleated jumpsuit – 1981-1982 
Archizoom Associati – Mies-Poltrona for Poltronova -1970-2018
Pietro Chiesa – Luminator for Fontana Arte

 

Gianfranco Ferre – Fall/Winter 1988-1989
Bo-Bo Kaminsky (stilisti David Mantej and Evelina Barilli) – Fall/Winter 1984-1985
Gianni Versace – Spring/Summer 1992

Italiana is an adjective, used here as a noun to indicate the complex set of traits, styles and atmospheres that define Italian culture in all its forms and expressions. The subtitle Italy through the Lens of Fashion—which in Italian, L’Italia vista dalla moda (literally “Italy as Seen from Fashion”), evokes “The Earth as Seen from the Moon,” Pier Paolo Pasolini’s episode of the film The Witches (1967) which presents fashion as the point of view privileged by the narration and the asserts and the need to take a new critical approach.


Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

 Pierpaolo Piccioli and Donatella Versace


Gulp – 1978 c. – Walter Albini -1981
Giorgio Armani - Fall/Winter 1991-1992 
Missoni – Fall/Winter 1991- 1992

The year 1971 symbolically marks the break with high fashion and the beginning of the period of Italian ready-to-wear: it was the year in which Walter Albini chose Milan for the first show of the line that bore his name, the so-called “unified collection.” And it was the year in which the women’s liberation movement emerged in Italy. The date 2001 is one of emblematic closure — the following year, after making its debut on financial markets in 1999, the Euro would enter into circulation.

 Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

Oliviero Toscani and Rosita Missoni

 

Francesco Vezzoli  - Self-Portrait with Vera Lehndorff as Veruschka and Gianpaolo Barbieri – 2001

 Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

Francesco Vezzoli, Miuccia Prada and Stefano Tonchi


Giorgio Armani – Fall/Winter – 1993-1994
Gianni Versace – Spring/Summer - 1982
Giorgio Armani - Fall/Winter – 1986-1987

 Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

“Mine is not a mannish woman. She is simply a woman who has adopted the intelligent and functional formulas of male attire. Not because she wants to look like a man, but because at eight o’clock in the morning, with an hour to get dressed and washed, it’s nice to know that with a jacket, a shirt and a pair of pants the problem is solved.”
Giorgio Armani – 1980


Photograph by Francesco De Luca – courtesy Karla Otto Milan


 Project Room

The surface of the industrial workbench is turned into a showcase to focus attention on fashion as a designed object. The horizontality of the bench is mirrored in the vertical display cabinets on the walls: the more experimental items of knitwear and clothing are laid out flat to emphasize the qualities of their construction and their graphic designs. From the avant-garde experiences of Archizoom Associati's dressing design and the experimental research of Nanni Strada to the decorative tours-de-force of innovative knitwear, represented by examples of excellence like Pour Toi, Missoni, Krizia and Fuzzi. The unprecedented juxtaposition of these items forms a landscape that reveals a still little-known quality of Italian fashion design. 

 Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

Dean Caten, Neil Barrett and Dan Caten


Enrico Coveri – Spring/Summer – 1985
 Alighiero Boetti Tutto – embroidered wall art - 1992-1994

 
Versace (creative director Donatella Versace)
Fall/Winter 2000-2001
Gucci  (creative director Tom Ford) – Spring/Summer – 1999

Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

Jean Paul Gaultier

 
Etro – Spring/Summer – 1995
Salvatore Ferragamo - Spring/Summer – 1999
Gianni Versace – Spring/Summer 1993
Pucci – Spring/Summer 1992
Versace (creative director Donatella Versace) – Spring/Summer 2000
Valentino – 1972
Maurizio Cattelan – Il Bel Paese – carpet - 1994

Photograph courtesy Karla Otto Milan

Laudomia Pucci

 
Fendi – Zucca handbag and suitcases (belonging to Sophia Loren) 1970s
Gianfranco Ferre – Fall/Winter – 1993-1994


Gianfranco Ferre – Fall/Winter – 1992-1993
Krizia - Fall/Winter – 1981-1982


Franco Moschino – 1992
Giulio Paolini – Casa di Lucrezio – sculpture - 1981
Franco Moschino – Spring/Summer 1993


Giovanni Gastel

 
Giorgio Armani – Fall/Winter 1981-1982
Romeo Gigli – Fall/Winter- 1989-1990


Dolce e Gabbana – Spring/Summer 1992
Gianfranco Ferre – Fall/Winter – 1987-1988


Fiorucci – 1970s





 





 







 

 
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