Mattotti: early works

Providing a comprehensive overview of his initial production, the exhibition in Udine offers an essential introduction and fundamental insights to Lorenzo Mattotti’s work.

There is always a story to be told – even about a small Italian province such as ours. And this was precisely what the young artist Lorenzo Mattotti set out to do during the early years of his artistic training here in Udine. Now, “Mattotti: Primi lavori”, a new exhibition showcasing his early works, will in turn recount the story of this initial phase in the artist’s development. The retrospective, which follows in the wake of the hugely popular “Mattotti: Sconfini” (exhibition currently on show at Villa Manin until 19 March) at Casa Cavazzini – Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Udine. Initiated and curated by Giovanna Durì and co-curated by Vania Gransinigh, Conservator of Casa Cavazzini, the exhibition aims to provide an essential introduction to Lorenzo Mattotti’s work and offers fundamental insights into the works currently on display at Villa Manin.

<b>Left</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, <i>Agata Blues</i>, 1979. <b>Right</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, <i>Remo</i>, comic strip from the 70s
<b>Left</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, drawing from the 70s. <b>Right</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti (drawings) and Antonio Tettamanti (texts), <i>Tram Tram Rock</i>, 1979
<b>Left</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, drawing from the 70s. <b>Right</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti (drawings) and Jerry Kramsky (texts), <i>Alice Brum Brum / La realtà è Strabica</i>, 1977
Lorenzo Mattotti, colour drawings from the 70s, 1977

  The Udine exhibition provides a comprehensive overview of Mattotti’s initial production, offering insights into the painterly eye of a young illustrator excited by the opportunity to capture and describe the world around him (invariably with a dose of irony). As well as music concerts (he had a particularly keen interest in music) and other social events he attended, Mattotti also drew scenes depicting social marginalization and mental illness. For Mattotti, Udine, a small provincial town, was just as important as any big city, even here there were valuable experiences that would inform his personal and artistic development.

Lorenzo Mattotti, sketch from the 70s
<b>Left</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, sketch from the 70s. <b>Right</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti (drawings) and Carlos Sampayo (texts), comic strip from the 70s
<b>Left</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, <i>Alice Brum Brum</i>, 1977. <b>Right</b>: Lorenzo Mattotti, <i>Cimurro e le sue ambrotole...</i>, 70s

  A young artist in search of his own style, Mattotti developed a fascination with situations and people on the margins of society, with vivid characters whose stories easily lent themselves to the comic-strip genre, to rapidly drawn vignettes aimed at capturing alternative, “non-conventional” realities. Despite spending his formative years in Udine, Mattotti’s eye and approach are those of a nomadic artist, an artist used to living in different places, to encountering and getting to know very different realities. A pertinent example of Lorenzo Mattotti’s “nomadic eye” is his first book, originally published under the title Alice Brum Brum in 1977, which is to be republished for the occasion of this new exhibition. Printed in limited edition, the republication of this early work will bear the original title La realtà è strabica (“Reality is Cross-eyed”) chosen at the time by the artist and his story writer, Jerry Kramsky and subsequently changed by the first publisher (Ottaviano Editore). The cycle of works selected for the Udine show, which includes strips from Alice Brum Brum / La realtà è Strabica, features both large and small illustrated sheets and is displayed in a particularly distinctive and intimate space within Casa Cavazzini, allowing the visitor to concentrate on the specific focus of the exhibition.


25 February 2017 – 4 June 2017
Mattotti: primi lavori
Casa Cavazzini – Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Udine
Curators: Giovanna Durì with Vania Gransinigh