Other Avant-Gardes: Carol Rama, Marisa Merz, and Radical Art-Making in 1960s Italy

 

May 04, 2017

CIMA is pleased to co-present a program hosted at the New Museum, organized in connection with their new exhibition Carol Rama: Antibodies, and in collaboration with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, currently showing Marisa Merz: The Sky Is a Great Space, on view at the Met Breuer. CIMA Members are entitled to a discounted friends & family rate.

This panel brings together scholars and curators to discuss the work of such luminaries as Carol Rama, Marisa Merz, and other artists from 1960s Italy, and is co-presented by the Met Breuer, the Center for Italian Modern Art, and the New Museum.

The New Museum’s exhibition “Carol Rama: Antibodies” and the Met Breuer’s exhibition “Marisa Merz: The Sky Is a Great Space” give long-overdue attention to two distinct artists who might be said to occupy, in the words of critic and curator Lea Vergine, “the other half of the avant-garde.” Addressing the cultural and sociopolitical landscape of 1960s Italy, this panel will consider how Rama and Merz, and other artists of their shared milieu, flourished despite the dominant masculinity of Arte Povera. Participants will address and rework the often tightly knit narrative of art that emerged from Italy in the 1960s, considering practices that variously invested in the body, domesticity, emotion, myth, and even pop culture.

Participants include Ian Alteveer, Curator, the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Claire Gilman, Senior Curator, the Drawing Center; Massimiliano Gioni, Edlis Neeson Artistic Director, New Museum; and Cristina Mundici, Art Historian, Archivio Carol Rama.

Please note: The program will take place at the New Museum on 235 Bowery.

TwitterFacebookEmail