Tag: #rome
LP in Rome
CONVERSATION with George DuBose: ALL RAMONES POP UP EXHIBITION
review and interview by Jamila Campagna … CONVERSATION with George DuBose: ALL RAMONES POP UP EXHIBITION
SPRING ATTITUDE 2016 // CONVERSATION with CATERINA TOMEO
Interview by Arianna Forte
Spring Attitude 2016, the International Festival of Electro Music and Contemporary Culture animated Rome for the seventh year. In this last edition the festival focus won’t be only about the most exclusive club music but also the whole digital universe. A big selection of international visual artists and digital performers will crowd the section Arts&New Media, directed by Caterina Tomeo, academic of Digital and Electronic Arts at RUFA – Rome University of Fine Arts. … SPRING ATTITUDE 2016 // CONVERSATION with CATERINA TOMEO
CARAVAGGIO EXPERIENCE
cured by Vera Viselli … CARAVAGGIO EXPERIENCE
LA FORZA DELLE ROVINE
Gaia Palombo
BLACK HOLE SUN
review by E.M.
PALAZZO DELLE ESPOSIZIONI, RUSSIA ON THE ROAD//UNA DOLCE VITA?//IMPRESSIONISTI E MODERNI
curated by Vera Viselli
… PALAZZO DELLE ESPOSIZIONI, RUSSIA ON THE ROAD//UNA DOLCE VITA?//IMPRESSIONISTI E MODERNI
DAVID LACHAPELLE // AFTER THE DELUGE
curated by Vera Viselli
If the American contemporary art can be summed up in a name, that name is David LaChapelle: a photographer discovered and introduced to the world of art by Andy Warhol; a director awarded at Sundance Festival; in 2006, David LaChapelle offers his eyes and pays his attention at Italian historical painting and sculpture, Michelangelo’s works above all, and gains the concept of The Deluge, a monumental series settled for a kind of exhibition conceived not only for media but especially for museum. A sort of return to origin (his works have been exhibited at: The Musée D’Orsay of Paris, The Brooklyn Museum of New York, The Museum of Contemporary Art of Taipei, The Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The National Portrait Gallery of London, The Fotographfiska Museet of Stockholm and The National Portrait Gallery of Washington DC) made by the fusion of his post-Pop surrealism and the classical feature of Michelangelo’s works, a kind of art so tough and massive to bring LaChapelle to a decisive turning point in his production.