A retrospective that retraces Barbieri’s themes and research, underscoring his constant attention to the theme of perception, his capacity to envision and interpret reality. With his photographs this artist casts doubt over the conventional modes of representation, to instead breathe life into new narratives by means of continuous, incessant perceptive experiments.
The exhibition is divided into seven sections beginning from Viaggio In Italia (1980–83), a period during which Barbieri dedicated his work to the city and the landscapes in the Italian province, with no folkloristic purpose, but rather to simply remain faithful to the visual given. The works during this phase, which were all made in color, then became part of a pivotal event: the Viaggio in Italia exhibition organized by Luigi Ghirri in 1984. Showing their works, besides Barbieri, were some other great Italian authors, including Jodice, Basilico, Guidi. The event is still considered to be a crucial experience for Italian photography.
This section includes the photographs that Barbieri presented for the 1984 exhibition and the ones he took in the three years before that.
The second section is called Images (1977–2007) and it includes the Flippers (1977–78) series, which Barbieri first became famous for, and which he exhibited following the invitation he received from Ghirri at the Galleria Civica di Modena.
Images taken inside an abandoned factory, in which the icons of post-Second World War American culture, from the pin-up to science fiction, from cowboys to the Beatles, became the ruins of the very modernity that falls to pieces, just like its myths. It is a series that raises symbolic issues, such as the juxtaposing of the icon and reality, but it also reveals a thinking about the mechanisms of vision.
These reflections also characterize the series dedicated to the paintings housed in the museums: Paintings (Uffizi) and Louvre, 2002, and TWIY (Capodimonte), 2007, where the use of selective focus offers the shots an unprecedented depth
The exhibition continues with Artificial Illuminations (1982–2014) in which phantasmagorical cities characterized by impossible and almost immaterial colors are the absolute protagonists. These are not post-produced images, but the result of very long exposures to artificial light. As Barbieri says: “There’s more time inside these photographs than the time it takes to look at them”; it is through these pictures that the photographer analyzes the potential of the photographic medium and the limits of the human eye.
The fourth section called China (1989–2014) is dedicated to journey to the Far East that since 1989 has been a constant in Barbieri’s life: India, Tibet, Japan, but first and foremost China, characterized by a unprecedented social and urban change. This is a narrative that unfolds over 25 years, from the first urban portraits of the 1990s – which witness the persistence of vernacular elements, of people-oriented architectures – up to the images of the new millennium which testify to the advancement of structure and infrastructures of disturbing proportions.
The sixth part of the exhibition is dedicated to the project called Site Specific_ (2003–2013), research which has involved flying in a helicopter close to more than 40 cities around the world, from Rome to Shanghai, from Las Vegas to Seville, from Turin to Montreal, from Beijing to Los Angeles, from Amman to New York, from Brasilia to Tel Aviv – all of them cities that at a certain point in their history have undergone sudden and irreversible transformations. Through this project Barbieri changes perspective, he subverts the point of view and, using a wholly museum-related term, that of the site-specific installation for a certain place, he seeks to represent the world as if it were a temporary installation.
The exhibition ends with Parks (2006–2014), a project that is almost the counterpart of Site Specific_, in which the key role is played by the relationship between Man and Nature. The linguistic instruments are the same ones that have been tried and tested over the years: photos taken from a helicopter, selective focus, design, rendering. Neither method nor language change in this constant visual experimentation, poised between the reality and the representation that characterize all of this artist’s work.
May 29 – November 15, 2015
Olivo Barbieri. Immagini 1978 – 2014
curated by Francesca Fabiani
catalogue Marsilio
MAXXI - Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo
via Guido reni 4A, Roma