La finestra del poeta

Organised at the occasion of Bonnefantenmuseum’s 20th anniversary, the exhibition on the fascinating Opera Grafica of Aldo Rossi travels to Lausanne and Bergamo.

Through the Italian architect Aldo Rossi’s work, one enters into a world where architectural ingenuity intertwines with artistic and philosophical concepts. Without this unconventional oeuvre, architectural prints would probably have remained a peripheral phenomenon.

Top: Aldo Rossi, Reliquie, (detail) 1989. Etching. Eredi Aldo Rossi, Collection Bonnefantenmuseum. Photo Peter Cox. Above: Aldo Rossi, Dieses ist langer – Ora questo è perduto, 1975. Etching. Collection Bonnefantenmuseum

On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of Aldo Rossi’s museum in Maastricht, the Bonnefantenmuseum produced an exhibition on the fascinating Opera Grafica of this versatile architect and artist. Along with the exhibition, titled “La finestra del poeta” after a favourite subject of Rossi’s, Silvana Editoriale has published the book Aldo Rossi: Opera Grafica, a work conducted in close cooperation with the museum and the Fondazione Aldo Rossi in Milan, and Archizoom is publishing a map and an application on the Città analoga.

Aldo Rossi, Il trattato perduto, 1981. Photoengraving. © Eredi Aldo Rossi, Collection Bonnefantenmuseum. Photo Peter Cox

The importance of Aldo Rossi (1932–1997) for the development of architectural culture can hardly be underestimated. Through his unique and complex network of theoretical works, buildings and projects, designs, teaching and exhibiting activities, and a vast production of drawings and prints, he was one of the most influential actors in the reorientation of architecture in the previous century. His production of prints cannot easily be compared to that of any other artist or architect, since it does not establish a “private niche’” On the contrary, his prints show an unconventional reaction to impulses from within (personal reflection) and from without (relationships with friends and commissioners).

Aldo Rossi, Il caffé del mattino, 1990. © Eredi Aldo Rossi, Collection Bonnefantenmuseum. Photo Peter Cox

The relatively small group of prints displayed at Opera Grafica has scarcely ever – undeservedly – been studied. But when considered within the broader perspective of the “rediscovery” of architectural prints of the 1970s, Rossi’s printmaking has had a determining role in this particular development. His prints, which are closely related to his drawings, display a fascinating relationship between unique and reproduction works, relating conceptually to Rossi’s influential idea of architecture as modus operandi – where the process is at least as important as the product.

Aldo Rossi, Venezia Analoga, 1989. Offsetprint. © Eredi Aldo Rossi, Collection Bonnefantenmuseum

Between 1973 (the year in which he curated the international Architectural Section of the 15th Triennial of Milan) until his death, Rossi enriched his oeuvre with over 100 prints. Though interested in the mysteries and possibilities of various graphic techniques, Rossi was not a trained printmaker. His prints often show a disconcerting variety of styles and techniques: some are experiments with printmaking; others are technically conventional or signed photomechanical reproductions.

Aldo Rossi working on a litho. Photo Houston Fine Art Press

After passing through Archizoom, the exhibition will be travelling to Bergamo, at the GAMeC (April–July 2016).


29 February – 23 March 2016
La finestra del poeta
Archizoom
EPFL, Lausanne