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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230713T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230713T193000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230607T091810Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T151956Z
UID:132187-1689271200-1689276600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:The Experience of Art / Special visit and conference of Director Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev
DESCRIPTION:The Experience of Art\n13 July 2023\, 6pm* – 7.30pm\nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Essere riservati. L’immortalità attraverso l’immortalità della propria collezione. Dalla precisione alla perfezione\nSala delle Orchidee – Villa Cerruti \nOn 13 July 2023\, from 6pm to 7.30pm\, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of the Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea and of the Cerruti Foundation\, will guide the public on a special visit to discover the secrets of Francesco Federico Cerruti and his collection of art and precious objects. The collector’s privileged relationship with the book and the binding will be addressed by examining an important work in the collection: the cusps depicting the announcing the Angel\, the Redeemer and the announced Virgin\, 1387-1388\, by the Florentine painter Agnolo Gaddi. \n  \n* Tickets must be collected by 5.45pm at Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office \nThe conferences\, for a maximum of 16 people\, are held in the Sala delle Orchidee of Villa Cerruti and include a special visit to the Villa.\nReservation is required on the page https://www.castellodirivoli.org/tickets/#\nThe cost of the full ticket is € 26.50; reduced ticket € 19.50 (journalists\, groups of 3 or more people\, Abbonamento Musei Piemonte Valle d’Aosta); € 10.00 for university students up to the age of 26 and equivalent institutions. The ticket includes admission to Castello di Rivoli which can be visited on the same day\, before the meeting. The Museum closes at 5.30pm\, but it is possible to go to the Ticket Office in the Manica Lunga until 5.45pm.\nThe shuttle to the Cerruti Collection leaves at 5.55pm from the square in front of Castello di Rivoli.\nTo collect the ticket\, it is necessary to go to the Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office at least 15 minutes before the departure of the shuttle. \n  \n[Image: Agnolo Gaddi\, Angelo annunciante\, Redentore\, Vergine annunciata\, 1387-88\, Collection Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti per l’Arte\, long-term loan Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, Rivoli-Turin] \n  \n \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\nWriter\, art historian and curator. Currently director of Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea and Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti per l’Arte\, Rivoli-Turin. She was the recipient of the 2019 Audrey Irmas Award for Curatorial Excellence and the Edith Kreeger Wolf Distinguished Visiting Professor in Art Theory and Practice at Northwestern University\, Chicago (2013-19). In 2008 she curated the Sydney Biennial\, followed by dOCUMENTA (13) in Kassel\, Banff\, Alessandria-Cairo and Bamiyan-Kabul in 2012 and the 14th Istanbul Biennial in 2015. Her major publications include the monograph Arte Povera (London 1999).
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/carolyn-christov-bakargiev-essere-riservati-limmortalita-attraverso-limmortalita-della-propria-collezione-dalla-precisione-alla-perfezione/
CATEGORIES:Collezione Cerruti
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/A26_Gaddi.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230718T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230718T150000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230629T143928Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250725T122652Z
UID:132197-1689678000-1689692400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:The Experience of Art / Extraordinary opening of the Cerruti Collection for Francesco Federico Cerruti's name day
DESCRIPTION:On Tuesday 18 July 2023\, from 11am to 3pm\, on the occasion of Francesco Federico Cerruti’s name day\, the Cerruti Collection will be exceptionally open to the public with guided tours organized by the Education Department of Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea and by the art historians Laura Cantone and Fabio Cafagna. \nGuided tours will take place in the following time slots: 11am\, 12pm and 1.40pm. \nReservation is required on the page https://www.castellodirivoli.org/tickets/#\nFull ticket: € 26\,50.\nReduced ticket: € 19\,50\, visitors over 65\, students aged 10 to 26\, teachers\, military personnel\, Museum Pass holders\, members of a group of 3 or more\, Fai members\, Touring Club members and members of the Friends of Castello di Rivoli Association.\nFree ticket: ICOM Card holders.\nThe ticket includes: the admission\, guided tours to the Cerruti Collection and Castello di Rivoli (Permanent Collection and exhibitions)*\, the connecting shuttle from Castello di Rivoli to Villa Cerruti.\nThe Guided tours are in Italian.\nEnglish\, French\, Spanish\, German for groups by reservation only.\nEach tour can accommodate max. 12 people.\nChildren from 10 years of age are admitted only accompanied by an adult. \n* Attention: Castello di Rivoli is not open on Tuesday 18 July; by keeping the voucher that will be delivered at the ticket office\, entry to the Castello di Rivoli will be allowed until 18 October 2023. \n  \n[Image: Villa Cerruti\, exterior\, 2019 © foto antonio maniscalco – milano]
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/the-experience-of-art-extraordinary-opening-of-the-cerruti-collection-for-francesco-federico-cerrutis-name-day/
LOCATION:Villa Cerruti\, vicolo dei Fiori\, Rivoli\, TO\, 10098\, Italia
CATEGORIES:Collezione Cerruti
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Cerruti.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230815T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230815T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230802T080231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T151743Z
UID:133393-1692097200-1692122400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:FERRAGOSTO 2023
DESCRIPTION:The Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art will be open on 15 August from 11 to 18. \nAt 11\, 14 and 16 the Artenauts of the Education Department will accompany visitors to the exhibition ” Artists at War ” \nOur Cafeteria will observe the same opening hours as the Museum. \n  \n 
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/ferragosto-2023/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230923T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230923T160000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230809T151504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230922T083003Z
UID:133325-1695463200-1695484800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Energy cultures. Energies\, imaginaries\, currencies\, and nuclear horizons of the planet. A 21st-century meeting of artists\, scientists\, and philosophers.
DESCRIPTION:Saturday September 23\, 2023\nThe conference is jointly drafted by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, and the artist Agnieszka Kurant\nSession I and II\, 10.00am to 12pm and 2pm to 4pm\, is open to the public\, takes place in the Castello di Rivoli theater\, and will be live streamed in the official YouTube channel of the Museum\nSession III\, 5pm to 7pm\, is a closed-door brainstorming meeting at newcleo\, Turin \nThe question of energy is among the most vital for the future of humanity and the multispecies flourishing of non-human and human life on earth. Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea presents a multi-disciplinary conference of art\, science and philosophy entitled Energy cultures. Energies\, imaginaries\, currencies\, and nuclear horizons of the planet to address the contradictions and unleash the disruptive and transformative properties of the energy flowing through artworks and scientific innovations. In an attempt to explore potential scenarios of energetic interspecies co-evolution\, the conference investigates living matter at the scale of its atoms\, their entanglement\, communication\, and interaction\, attempting to challenge the static postulates and imagined futures of energy. The conference\, which will be held on September 23\, will bring artists\, writers\, scientists\, philosophers\, and architects together for a morning session open to the public in the Theater of the Museum. In the afternoon\, they will continue their discussions in a private brainstorming session and meeting of minds at newcleo in downtown Turin\, an enterprise dedicated to innovative approaches to nuclear energy with an ecological focus. \n“newcleo supports and is co-hosting this event with Castello di Rivoli\,” states Director Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, “and I say this with full disclosure: the participants are not all supporters of nuclear energy as part of our future; some of them are highly skeptical. We will put the skeptics and the enthusiasts together and produce a chemical reaction – unleashing quite a bit of psychic energy in the room\, which I look forward to.” \nEnergy has shaped life on earth\, civilizations and societies throughout history\, from the pre-human photosynthetic conversion of solar power into plant biomass\, passing through the human-induced CO2-producing carbon fossil fuel including coal\, gas\, and oil\, to hydroelectricity achieved through damming\, up to the “very human” mid-20th century use of atomic energy through nuclear fission (the process by which neutrons released from atoms boil water used to generate electricity in turbines). Energy “makes the world go round.” Indeed\, it has been a subject of human investigation in the Global North and the Global South and in the indigenous worlds forever. The Greek term ἐνέργεια (energeia)\, adopted for the first time by Aristotle\, derives from the earlier use of the termἔργον (ergon) meaning “active\, working\,” preceded by en– which means “at” or “towards”. Already the pre-Socratic Heraclitus used the word Ergon (action or deed) and saw the universe in continuous change\, and fire as the primary source of action and creator of all life. \nEnergy is a universal currency\, made of a swirling of animal\, vegetal\, and physical forces. Nonetheless\, the current forms of human energy production and consumption are leading to world destruction. Clean energy is the foundation on which our future should rest\, but clean electricity still abundantly depends on storage and lithium-ion batteries\, which might soon be complemented by sodium ion batteries. How can we cope with the storage of energy? What about the excess of unexploited energy\, which accumulates as heat? How can we transmit it or make it become life for other bodies? In the massive-scale stockpiling of energy\, essential for our technological devices\, can we turn to plants as ‘hyperaccumulators’ and to practices such as agromining or phytomining to reduce greenhouse gas and water pollution\, which are byproducts of mineral extraction? As suggested by philosopher Emanuele Coccia\, what seems to happen nowadays is a shift of paradigms from the classic thermodynamic system – where the issue at stake is maintaining an equilibrium – to an alchemical one – where any living and non-living being is potentially able to store\, release\, and multiply the energy received. The contemporary political economy could be described as total cybernetics\, based on perpetual transformations of energy as currency into information and into capital\, while social energies\, mined like oil and gas with algorithms\, become part of the global energy market. \n“The current abandonment of fossil fuel energies and their gradual replacement by renewable energies\,” says artist Agnieszka Kurant\, “interestingly coincides with the dematerialization of money and its partial substitution with digital currencies\, the production of which is mostly dependent on energy. Traditional mining of fossil fuels and minerals is currently accompanied by the mining of cryptocurrencies on the blockchain—one of which was notably named ‘gas’. What is essential in the production of a crypto currency – a digital current generated through computers solving mathematical problems – is the energy to power the computer. Human labor is still indispensable here and performed by exploited workers at various mines\, extracting the rare Earth metals powering computers\, but due to its reliance on energy\, the production of capital through crypto-currency mining has become a race for the cheapest sources to power server farms. Such energy-intensive extractivist capital production in the Global North has environmental repercussions in the countries of the Global South.” \nIn the rampant drive to extract the last drop of energy from everything and everyone\, new forms of slavery have developed. As the global climate crisis forces us to decarbonize and wean ourselves off fossil-fuels\, what are the clean energy solutions to mitigate climate change? We have increased more ecological and sustainable water\, wind\, and sun-based energy production. Counter-intuitively\, recent research points also to new forms of nuclear energy produced using nuclear waste as fuel thus ridding the planet of radioactive waste. Researchers in the field argue that nuclear fission might co-support the future of clean energy systems globally. Yet\, even if nuclear energy has been statistically less impactful on the environment than fossil fuels\, the fear of nuclear accidents continues to be the main consideration when discussing this matter in science\, humanities\, and in art. Can this be caused by the association with weaponized nuclear energy through the continuous bomb testing\, which devastated both the environment and communities in places where atomic bomb tests have been frequent since the 1950s? \nAs the physical and psychic memory of radioactive waste is currently counterbalanced by the ecological pressure of a nuclear transition against climate collapse\, it is time to reinvent out usage of energy to serve sustainable development. Theorists posit that bioremediation – a branch of biotechnology that employs the use of living organisms\, such as microbes and bacteria\, in the removal of contaminants and toxins from soil\, water\, and other environments – is currently being set up as an ecological and economic alternative to traditional procedures of removal of radioactive waste.  It has been discovered that certain bacteria have the ability to interact with and absorb radioactive substances\, thereby potentially aiding in the cleanup and remediation of contaminated sites. \n“Seventy years of experience in operations of nuclear reactors” states Stefano Buono\, founder of newcleo\, “have now proven that it is even possible to employ the radioactive nuclear waste already existing from decommissioned nuclear fuel or bombs to produce nuclear energy for hundreds of years without extracting any further minerals such as uranium from the earth and do this at competitive costs. A nuclear reaction provides 1 million times more energy than any chemical reactions\, and finding ways of using this energy can provide what is needed for the generations to come without impacting our planet producing carbon dioxide which causes global warming.” \nBut how to negotiate and transform the longstanding dread of nuclear contamination – vividly feeding into the scenarios of science fiction\, nuclear disarmament movements and art movements such as Arte nucleare since the second half of the 20th century – nowadays magnified by the reiteration of war threats? Founded by the Italian artist Enrico Baj together with Sergio Dangelo and Gianni Bertini\, in Milan in 1951\, the group of Arte nucleare celebrated nuclear energy but also warned of the dangers of the misapplication of nuclear technology for the environment by detonating ‘heavy water’\, made from a novel technique of combining enamel paint and distilled water. An indirect continuity runs down to Arte povera in terms of sensibility towards the environmental backlash of positivistic science but also of the flux of energy blasting up from the earth\, clearly traceable in Gilberto Zorio’s work\, or works by other artists such as Giovanni Anselmo and Mario Merz. Embracing how the subatomic particles of the atom collide\, these artists manifested the energy latent in the world incorporating in their research the tension between nature and culture. Their experimentation is the prelude to contemporary artistic practices veering between climate breakdown\, more-than-human consciousness\, biological and computational energies. The nuclear sublime and nuclear melancholy traverse new works by artists today\, from Adrián Villar Rojas to Himali Singh Soin\, from Lea Porsager to Sophie Cundale and Renato Leotta. \nMuseums and art institutions\, such as Castello di Rivoli\, and artistic practices in general\, can contextualize contemporary political debates on climate and power and on a new nuclear transition. The conference Energy cultures. Energies\, imaginaries\, currencies\, and nuclear horizons of the planet prompts a collective reflection on factors that influence energy production\, circulation\, and consumption\, and opportunities for change in order to prepare for a future that has already arrived. What makes these considerations of energy particularly urgent is the context of the global energy crisis\, began in the aftermath of the COVID- 19 pandemic and exacerbated in Europe by the menace of an energy embargo due to the war in Ukraine. This has led to speculation\, shortages\, increased prices in oil\, gas\, and electricity markets and inflation. The energy crisis\, combined with the climate crisis\, is morphing into an ongoing phase where a lasting transition to non-carbon fossil fuel alternative energy sources is no longer an option. The issue of energy is to be also addressed considering those developing and emerging economies\, which currently face a two-fold energy challenge: meeting the needs of billions of people who still lack access to basic\, modern energy services while simultaneously participating in a transition to zero-carbon energy systems for the good of the entire planet. \nThe conveners of the program are Agnieszka Kurant and Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev.\nEvent organization by Giulia Colletti of Castello di Rivoli. \nParticipants: Paola Antonelli\, designer\, architect\, and curator; Stefano Buono\, nuclear physicist and co-founder of newcleo; Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, art historian\, Director Castello di Rivoli; Luciano Cinotti\, nuclear scientist; Emanuele Coccia\, philosopher; Beatriz Colomina\, architectural historian\, theorist\, curator; Kate Crawford\, artist and writer; Sophie Cundale\, artist; Agnieszka Kurant\, artist; Renato Leotta\, artist; Sam Lewitt\, artist; Michael Marder\, philosopher; Lea Porsager\, artist; Federico Ronchetti\, nuclear physicist and coordinator of Alice Run at CERN; Himali Singh Soin\, poet and artist; Bruce Sterling\, science fiction author; Ash Thorp\, digital artist\, graphic designer\, and creative director; Ersilia Vaudo\, astrophysicist; Adrián Villar Rojas\, artist; Mark Wigley\, architectural historian\, theorist\, curator; Gilberto Zorio\, artist. \nThe conference is supported and co-hosted by newcleo \n \nWith thanks to Stefano Buono for his support of the event \n  \nBIOGRAPHIES \n\n \nPaola Antonelli (Sassari\, 1963) is Senior Curator of the Department of Architecture and Design and Founding Director of Research and Development at MoMa New York. Her research focuses on design in all its forms\, expanding its reach to include overlooked objects and practices from architecture to video games. Her exhibitions\, lectures\, and writings contemplate design’s intersection and interaction with other fields such as technology and biology but also popular culture and life—that of individuals\, communities\, all species\, and all planets. Her goal is to promote people’s understanding of design\, until its positive influence on the world is universally acknowledged. \n  \n \nStefano Buono (Avellino\, 1966) is a physicist and CERN alumnus. In 2021\, Buono co-founded the nuclear technology company newcleo\, of which he is currently Managing Director. In 2018\, he founded Elysia Capital\, a Family Office focused on social impact investments in the field of sustainable innovation\, well-being\, education\, art and culture. Buono is President of Planet Holding LTD\, a world leader in social innovation solutions for real estate. He is also President of LIFTT\, a private company that focuses on stimulating and supporting technology transfer from research institutes\, generating a positive impact through the economic investment made from research and innovation plans. \n  \n \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev (Ridgewood\, 1957) is Director of Castello di Rivoli and Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti and Visiting Professor at the University of Basel. She was Artistic Director of the 14th Istanbul Biennial (2015); Artistic Director of dOCUMENTA (13) (2012); Artistic Director of the 16th Sydney Biennale (2008); Chief Curator at MoMa PS1 Contemporary Art Center (1999-2001)\, following a period at Villa Medici\, where she drafted the exhibition summer program (1998-2000). Among her major publications is the catalog of the Cerruti Collection (Allemandi\, 2021) and  the monograph Arte povera (Phaidon Press\, 1999). She received the Audrey Irmas Award for Curatorial Excellence 2019. \n  \n \nLuciano Cinotti (Cerreto Guidi\, 1949) is a nuclear engineer and a leading expert in Fast Reactor technologies. He led the Ansaldo Nucleare activities for the improved European fast reactor and the innovative reactors PIUS and PRISM\, while also conceiving ISIS\, a fully passive reactor for the combined generation of electricity and heat. He is a Euratom Representative and the Chairman of the Lead Fast Reactors Steering Committee of the Generation-IV International Forum from its inception until 2010. He is also the author of most of the world’s LFR-related patents. He is the Scientific Director of newcleo.  \n  \n \nEmanuele Coccia is Associate Professor at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales. He was Visiting Professor at The University of Buenos Aires; Columbia University; Harvard; among others. He is the author of Filosofia della casa. Lo spazio domestico e la felicità (Einaudi\, 2021)\, Métamorphoses (Rivages\, 2020)\, The Life of Plants: A Metaphysics of Mixture (Politi Press\, 2018)\, Sensible Life: A Micro-ontology of the Image (Fordham University Press\, 2016); and co-author of Modern Alchemy with Viviane (JBE Books\, 2022). He co-directed and co-produced the animation videos Quercus with Formafantasma (2019)\, Heaven in Matter with Faye Formisano (2021)\, Portal of Mysteries with Dotdotdot (2022); wrote plays with Frédérique Aït Touati and Duncan Evenou (2022 and 2023); co-produced La Chambre des mémoires à-veniré (2023); contributed to Nous les Arbres (2019) at Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain; edited the catalogs of Triennale di Milano (2023). He is writing a four-handed work on fashion and philosophy with Alessandro Michele. \n  \n \nBeatriz Colomina (Madrid\, 1952) is the Howard Crosby Butler Professor of Architecture at Princeton University. Her books include X-Ray Architecture (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2019)\, Domesticity at War (The MIT Press\, 2007)\, and Privacy and Publicity: Modern Architecture as Media (The MIT Press\, 1996). In Are We Human? Notes on an Archeology of Design (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2016)\, Colomina and Mark Wigley explore ways in which humans have been radically redesigned by technologies. In this framework\, nuclear waste and distribution of nuclear energy are addressed in relationship with humans’ counterintuitive attitude of extinguishing themselves. In the wake of this\, a sense of urgency came over the design community and they researched the notion of survival through counter-design in the post-war era.  \n  \n \nKate Crawford (Sydney\, 1976) is a scholar focusing on the social implications of AI. Her work focuses on large-scale data systems and machine learning in the wider contexts of history and environment. She is a Senior Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research New York\, Research Professor of Communication and STS at USC Annenberg\, and Visiting Chair for AI and Justice at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Her latest book is Atlas of AI (Yale University Press\, 2021) looks at AI with a humanist’s eye and an artist’s sense of what really matters. In this book\, Crawford recalls AI is not all about big data and machine learning\, but rather the natural world. \n  \n \nSophie Cundale (London\, 1987) is an artist and filmmaker currently working on Half Life\, a novella about a woman\, who falls in love with nuclear waste. The intertwining of nuclear matter and sensual appetites links to matters such as self-poisoning\, eating disorders\, and addiction to toxic substances but also to an attractiveness towards current nuclear neglect. Her first major solo show took place at South London Gallery and Bonington Gallery (2020) Her recent and previous works have been presented at Plaza Plaza\, London; Kapp Kapp Gallery\, Philadelphia; Temporary Gallery\, Cologne; Spike Island\, Bristol; Govett-Brewster Gallery\, New Zealand; Catalyst Arts\, AMINI festival\, Belfast; VCD festival\, Beijing; Chisenhale Gallery\, London; Innsbruck Biennale\, Austria; and commissioned by Serpentine Galleries. \n  \n \nAgnieszka Kurant (Łódź\, 1978) is an artist investigating collective and nonhuman intelligences\, the future of labor\, and the exploitations within surveillance capitalism. Her solo exhibitions have been presented at Hannover Kunstverein (2023); Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea (2021-22); SculptureCenter (2013). Her site-specific installations have been commissioned by MIT List Visual Arts Center (2022)\, Guggenheim Museum (2015). She presented an immersive installation with Aleksandra Wasikowska for the Polish Pavilion of the 12th Venice Biennale of Architecture (2010). Her works have been featured in collective exhibitions MoMA; Centre Pompidou; Palais de Tokyo; Guggenheim Bilbao; CAPC Bordeaux; Kunsthalle Wien; Witte de With; Whitechapel Art Gallery; The Kitchen; Triennale di Milano\, among others. \n  \n \nThe research of Renato Leotta (Siracusa-Turin\, 1982) spans from photography\, to video and archival materials\, investigating the relationship between sea\, sky\, and land in an attempt to create a dialogue between the real and the ideal. Leotta won the Italian Council Edition X with CONCERTINO per il mare (2023)\, presented at Castello di Rivoli after his solo exhibition Sole (2020). He participated in the 17th Istanbul Biennial (2023) and was Italian Fellow in Visual Arts at the American Academy in Rome (2019). He recently presented the solo exhibition Sensibilità at Le Quai – Società delle Api\, Monaco (2023). His works have been presented in group exhibitions and biennials including Manifesta12; Gropius Bau Berlin; MAC São Paulo; Palazzo Fortuny Venice. He is co-founder of CRIPTA747 in Turin and Istituto Sicilia. \n  \n \n\nSam Lewitt (Los Angeles\, 1981) investigates systems of meaning—archives\, mediums of communication\, and technologies —as they are manifested materially\, framed by institutions\, and interpreted by subjects. Lewitt excavates industrial\, commercial\, and educational structures to uncover the conditions of their production and their relationship to the context in which they emerged. Works such as CURE (the Work)\, z33 House of Contemporary Art (2021); More Heat than Light\, Kunsthalle Basel and CCA Wattis (2016); and Stranded Assets\, the 57th Venice Biennale (2017); expand his inquiry into the metabolism of production and infrastructure. The latter emerges from a set of lamps found in the stairwell of the recently decommissioned Giuseppe Volpi thermoelectric power plant in Venice’s industrial port of Marghera. \n\n  \n \nMichael Marder (Moscow\, 1980) is Ikerbasque Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country\, UPV/EHU\, Vitoria-Gasteiz. His work spans the fields of environmental philosophy and ecological thought\, political theory\, and phenomenology. Marder has taught at several universities in the United States and Canada\, including Georgetown University\, George Washington University\, Duquesne University\, University of Toronto and University of Saskatchewan. His latest books include The Phoenix Complex: A Philosophy of Nature (MIT Press\, 2023) and\, with Edward S. Casey\, Plants in Place:A Phenomenology of the Vegetal (Columbia University Press\, 2023). Marder is currently working on his forthcoming publication Metamorphoses Reimagined (Columbia University Press\, forthcoming in 2024).  \n  \n \nLea Porsager (Frederikssund\, 1981) is an artist who plays with quantum physics\, tantric practices\, and feminist theory. She interweaves fabulation and materialization within a variety of mediums\, including film\, sculpture\, and text. She was awarded the Mads Øvlisen Postdoc Fellowship (2023). Porsager’s research involves a collaboration with Arts at CERN\, for which she received an Honorary Mention for the Collide International Award (2018). Her earthwork and memorial Gravitational Ripples (2018) was inaugurated in Stockholm\, Sweden\, commemorating the Swedish lives lost in the 2004 tsunami in Southeast Asia. Her solo exhibitions have been presented at Kunsthal Charlottenborg\, Copenhagen (2021); Moderna Museet\, Stockholm (2020-21). She participated in dOCUMENTA (13) and the 14th Istanbul Biennial. Porsager is currently engaged in public art commissions across Denmark\, Norway\, and Sweden.   \n  \n \nFederico Ronchetti (Tivoli\, 1966) is a nuclear physicist at CERN specialized in the development\, production\, and operation of detectors for large HEP experiments. He has extensive experience with data acquisition systems\, hardware and software trigger systems\, and programming for scientific computing. He coordinated the data taking operations of the ALICE project at CERN in critical moments\, i.e.\, after the main upgrades of the detectors and the LHC accelerator. He is currently the technical coordinator at CERN of a parallel computing farm made up of 2800 GPU units used for the compression and synchronous processing of the data recorded by the ALICE detector. This is combined with his commitment to divulgation of science to the general public. \n  \n \nHimali Singh Soin (New Delhi\,1987) is an artist and writer creating metaphors from the natural environment and constructing speculative cosmologies that reveal non-linear entanglements between human and non-human life. She explores the myriad technologies of knowing\, from scientific to alchemical. Her inspirations include the ancient Stoics and contemporary literature\, travel diaries and ancient diagrams. She works across film\, spoken word\, performance\, epistolary poetry\, animation\, music\, ceramic and textile\, which allows her to interweave complex concepts and narratives together. Soin has performed and exhibited at The Art Institute of Chicago; Serpentine Galleries; Dhaka Art Summit\, Dhaka; Somerset House; HKW. She won the India Foundation for the Arts Award and the Frieze Artist Award. \n  \n \nBruce Sterling (Brownsville\, 1954) is a science fiction writer\, net critic\, and cyberspace theorist who emerged as a proponent of the subgenre known as steampunk. Along with William Gibson\, another one of the major figures of cyberpunk\, Bruce Sterling co-authored the novel The Difference Engine (Victor Gollancz Ltd\, 1990)\, forming an alternate—or speculative— history set in 1855 London\, which is anachronistically advanced. Signing with his pseudonym\, in 2015 he published an anthology of stories titled Utopia pirata – i racconti di Bruno Argento (Mondadori\, 2015) taking place in Turin\, where the hackers of parallel city converge or in Fiume\, where hackers attempt the conquest of the world in a tumultuous advance of countercultures. \n  \n \nAsh Thorp (Oceanside\, 1983) is a digital artist\, creative director\, and concept illustrator. He collaborates with the film industry\, experimenting with 3D modeling\, VFX\, motion graphics and contributing to movies such as Prometheus (2012); The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014); The Batman (2022); among others. He is also known for creating his own digital artworks\, unique 1/1 NFT short videos (usually circa 24’’ long) like Degradation (2021); the series  Evident Mirror (2021); short films\, such as Evinetta (2020);  the limited-run online multi-part short film Chimera (2023)\, and the new abstract short film Diamond Eye (2023); among others. In his most recent NFT series\, Nascent (2023)\, he questions the human condition in an era characterized by a rampant dependence on technology. Chimera unfolds at the intersection between disturbing accidents and uncanny encounters with aliens. Bending the time-space dimension\, Thorp plays with the allure of post-apocalyptic scenarios\, inviting the audience to engage with their inner fears and future imaginaries.  \n  \n \nErsilia Vaudo (Gaeta\, 1963) has a degree in Astrophysics and has been working at the European Space Agency since 1991. During her career\, she held various roles in the field of strategy\, and worked for several years at the ESA office in Washington DC\, where she was in charge of relations with NASA. She was the Curator of the XXII International Exhibition of the Milan Triennale on the theme Unknown Unknowns. An introduction to mysteries (2022). Ersilia Vaudo is President and co-founder of the association Il Cielo itinerante to promote STEM in areas where educational inclusion is lacking. She has recently published Mirabilis. Cinque intuizioni (più altre in arrivo) che hanno rivoluzionato la nostra idea di Universo (Einaudi\, 2023).   \n  \n \nAdrián Villar Rojas (Rosario\, 1980) conceives long term projects\, collectively and collaboratively produced that take the shape of large-scale and site-specific environments. Within his research and worldbuilding\, which mixes sculpture\, drawing\, video\, literature and performative traces\, Villar Rojas brings together the human and more-than-human realms while investigating the fragile and temporary nature of human civilization. His recent exhibitions include The End of Imagination\, Art Gallery of New South Wales\, Sydney (2022); El fin de la imaginación\, The Bass\, Miami (2022); Poems for Earthlings\, Oude Kerk\, Amsterdam (2019); The Theater of Disappearance\, The Geffen Contemporary at Moca\, Los Angeles (2017); NEON at Athens National Observatory\, Greece (2017); and have been presented at Kunsthaus Bregenz (2017); The Metropolitan Museum of Art (2017); among other institutions.  \n  \n \nMark Wigley (Palmerston North\, 1959) is Professor of Architecture at Columbia University. His books include Konrad Wachsmann’s Television: Post-Architectural Transmissions (Sternberg Press\, 2021)\, Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2018)\, and Buckminster Fuller Inc.: Architecture in the Age of Radio (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2015). In their landmark book Are We Human? Notes on an Archeology of Design (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2016)\, Wigley and Beatriz Colomina explored the way that the human species has always been continuously and radically redesigned by its technologies. In this frame\, the question of nuclear waste and the distribution of nuclear energy is addressed in relationship with the human species counterintuitive attitude of extinguishing itself – we essentially designed our own exit. In the wake of this\, a sense of urgency came over the design community\, and they researched the notion of survival through new kinds of design and counter-design in the post-war years. \n  \n \nGilberto Zorio (Andorno Micca\, 1944) is one of the artists associated with the movement formed in the mid-sixties in Italy\, Arte povera. Energy is constantly running through Zorio’s entire research and makes the matter of the works perpetually changeable. From 1967 to today\, Zorio has presented in solo exhibitions at the Kunstmuseum (1976); Stedelijk Museum (1979); Venice Biennale (1978\, 1980\, 1986\, 1995\, 1997); Kunstverein (1985); Center d’Art Contemporain of Geneva and Center Georges Pompidou (1986); Tel Aviv Museum and Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum (1987); Museu Serralves (1990); Documenta and Musèe d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporain (1992); Dia: Center for the Arts (2001); Milton Keynes Gallery (2008); MAMbo (2009); MACRO (2010); Rivoli Castle (2017); among other institutions.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/energy-cultures-energies-imaginaries-currencies-and-nuclear-horizons-of-the-planet-a-21st-century-meeting-of-artists-scientists-philosophers/
LOCATION:Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea
CATEGORIES:conferenza,CRRI,Dipartimento Curatoriale
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/20230114_112718-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230923T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230923T160000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230809T152444Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T151420Z
UID:133201-1695463200-1695484800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Energy cultures. Energies\, imaginaries\, currencies\, and nuclear horizons of the planet. A 21st-century meeting of artists\, scientists\, and philosophers.
DESCRIPTION:Saturday September 23\, 2023\nThe conference is jointly drafted by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, and the artist Agnieszka Kurant\nSession I and II\, 10.00am to 12pm and 2pm to 4pm\, is open to the public\, takes place in the Castello di Rivoli theater\, and will be live streamed in the official YouTube channel of the Museum\nSession III\, 5pm to 7pm\, is a closed-door brainstorming meeting at newcleo\, Turin \nThe question of energy is among the most vital for the future of humanity and the multispecies flourishing of non-human and human life on earth. Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea presents a multi-disciplinary conference of art\, science and philosophy entitled Energy cultures. Energies\, imaginaries\, currencies\, and nuclear horizons of the planet to address the contradictions and unleash the disruptive and transformative properties of the energy flowing through artworks and scientific innovations. In an attempt to explore potential scenarios of energetic interspecies co-evolution\, the conference investigates living matter at the scale of its atoms\, their entanglement\, communication\, and interaction\, attempting to challenge the static postulates and imagined futures of energy. The conference\, which will be held on September 23\, will bring artists\, writers\, scientists\, philosophers\, and architects together for a morning session open to the public in the Theater of the Museum. In the afternoon\, they will continue their discussions in a private brainstorming session and meeting of minds at newcleo in downtown Turin\, an enterprise dedicated to innovative approaches to nuclear energy with an ecological focus. \n“newcleo supports and is co-hosting this event with Castello di Rivoli\,” states Director Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, “and I say this with full disclosure: the participants are not all supporters of nuclear energy as part of our future; some of them are highly skeptical. We will put the skeptics and the enthusiasts together and produce a chemical reaction – unleashing quite a bit of psychic energy in the room\, which I look forward to.” \nEnergy has shaped life on Earth\, civilizations and societies throughout history\, from the pre-human photosynthetic conversion of solar power into plant biomass\, passing through the human-induced CO2-producing carbon fossil fuel including coal\, gas\, and oil\, to hydroelectricity achieved through damming\, up to the “very human” mid-20th century use of atomic energy through nuclear fission (the process by which neutrons released from atoms boil water used to generate electricity in turbines). Energy “makes the world go round.” Indeed\, it has been a subject of human investigation in the Global North and the Global South and in the indigenous worlds forever. The Greek term ἐνέργεια (energeia)\, adopted for the first time by Aristotle\, derives from the earlier use of the term ἔργον (ergon) meaning “active\, working\,” preceded by en– which means “at” or “towards”. It was first used by Heraclitus and other pre-Socratic philosophers to connote fire as the primary source of action and the fundamental element of all life on Gaia\, or earth. \nEnergy is a universal currency\, made of a swirling of animal\, vegetal\, and physical forces. Nonetheless\, the current forms of human energy production and consumption are leading to world destruction. Clean energy is the foundation on which our future should rest\, but clean electricity still abundantly depends on storage and lithium-ion batteries\, which might soon be complemented by sodium ion batteries. How can we cope with the storage of energy? What about the excess of unexploited energy\, which accumulates as heat? How can we transmit it or make it become life for other bodies? In the massive-scale stockpiling of energy\, essential for our technological devices\, can we turn to plants as ‘hyperaccumulators’ and to practices such as agromining or phytomining to reduce greenhouse gas and water pollution\, which are byproducts of mineral extraction? As suggested by philosopher Emanuele Coccia\, what seems to happen nowadays is a shift of paradigms from the classic thermodynamic system – where the issue at stake is maintaining an equilibrium – to an alchemical one – where any living and non-living being is potentially able to store\, release\, and multiply the energy received. The contemporary political economy could be described as total cybernetics\, based on perpetual transformations of energy as currency into information and into capital\, while social energies\, mined like oil and gas with algorithms\, become part of the global energy market. \n“The current abandonment of fossil fuel energies and their gradual replacement by renewable energies\,” says artist Agnieszka Kurant\, “interestingly coincides with the dematerialization of money and its partial substitution with digital currencies\, the production of which is mostly dependent on energy. Traditional mining of fossil fuels and minerals is currently accompanied by the mining of cryptocurrencies on the blockchain—one of which was notably named ‘gas’. What is essential in the production of a crypto currency – a digital current generated through computers solving mathematical problems – is the energy to power the computer. Human labor is still indispensable here and performed by exploited workers at various mines\, extracting the rare Earth metals powering computers\, but due to its reliance on energy\, the production of capital through crypto-currency mining has become a race for the cheapest sources to power server farms. Such energy-intensive extractivist capital production in the Global North has environmental repercussions in the countries of the Global South.” \nIn the rampant drive to extract the last drop of energy from everything and everyone\, new forms of slavery have developed. As the global climate crisis forces us to decarbonize and wean ourselves off fossil-fuels\, what are the clean energy solutions to mitigate climate change? We have increased more ecological and sustainable water\, wind\, and sun-based energy production. Counter-intuitively\, recent research points also to new forms of nuclear energy produced using nuclear waste as fuel thus ridding the planet of radioactive waste. Researchers in the field argue that nuclear fission might co-support the future of clean energy systems globally. Yet\, even if nuclear energy has been statistically less impactful on the environment than fossil fuels\, the fear of nuclear accidents continues to be the main consideration when discussing this matter in science\, humanities\, and in art. Can this be caused by the association with weaponized nuclear energy through the continuous bomb testing\, which devastated both the environment and communities in places where atomic bomb tests have been frequent since the 1950s? \nAs the physical and psychic memory of radioactive waste is currently counterbalanced by the ecological pressure of a nuclear transition against climate collapse\, it is time to reinvent out usage of energy to serve sustainable development. Theorists posit that bioremediation – a branch of biotechnology that employs the use of living organisms\, such as microbes and bacteria\, in the removal of contaminants and toxins from soil\, water\, and other environments – is currently being set up as an ecological and economic alternative to traditional procedures of removal of radioactive waste.  It has been discovered that certain bacteria have the ability to interact with and absorb radioactive substances\, thereby potentially aiding in the cleanup and remediation of contaminated sites. \n“Seventy years of experience in operations of nuclear reactors” states Stefano Buono\, founder of newcleo\, “have now proven that it is even possible to employ the radioactive nuclear waste already existing from decommissioned nuclear fuel or bombs to produce nuclear energy for hundreds of years without extracting any further minerals such as uranium from the earth and do this at competitive costs. A nuclear reaction provides 1 million times more energy than any chemical reactions\, and finding ways of using this energy can provide what is needed for the generations to come without impacting our planet producing carbon dioxide which causes global warming.” \nBut how to negotiate and transform the longstanding dread of nuclear contamination – vividly feeding into the scenarios of science fiction\, nuclear disarmament movements and art movements such as Arte nucleare since the second half of the 20th century – nowadays magnified by the reiteration of war threats? Founded by the Italian artist Enrico Baj together with Sergio Dangelo and Gianni Bertini\, in Milan in 1951\, the group of Arte nucleare celebrated nuclear energy but also warned of the dangers of the misapplication of nuclear technology for the environment by detonating ‘heavy water’\, made from a novel technique of combining enamel paint and distilled water. An indirect continuity runs down to Arte povera in terms of sensibility towards the environmental backlash of positivistic science but also of the flux of energy blasting up from the earth\, clearly traceable in Gilberto Zorio’s work\, or works by other artists such as Giovanni Anselmo and Mario Merz. Embracing how the subatomic particles of the atom collide\, these artists manifested the energy latent in the world incorporating in their research the tension between nature and culture. Their experimentation is the prelude to contemporary artistic practices veering between climate breakdown\, more-than-human consciousness\, biological and computational energies. The nuclear sublime and nuclear melancholy traverse new works by artists today\, from Adrián Villar Rojas to Himali Singh Soin\, from Lea Porsager to Sophie Cundale and Renato Leotta. \nMuseums and art institutions\, such as Castello di Rivoli\, and artistic practices in general\, can contextualize contemporary political debates on climate and power and on a new nuclear transition. The conference Energy cultures. Energies\, imaginaries\, currencies\, and nuclear horizons of the planet prompts a collective reflection on factors that influence energy production\, circulation\, and consumption\, and opportunities for change in order to prepare for a future that has already arrived. What makes these considerations of energy particularly urgent is the context of the global energy crisis\, began in the aftermath of the COVID- 19 pandemic and exacerbated in Europe by the menace of an energy embargo due to the war in Ukraine. This has led to speculation\, shortages\, increased prices in oil\, gas\, and electricity markets and inflation. The energy crisis\, combined with the climate crisis\, is morphing into an ongoing phase where a lasting transition to non-carbon fossil fuel alternative energy sources is no longer an option. The issue of energy is to be also addressed considering those developing and emerging economies\, which currently face a two-fold energy challenge: meeting the needs of billions of people who still lack access to basic\, modern energy services while simultaneously participating in a transition to zero-carbon energy systems for the good of the entire planet. \nThe conveners of the program are Agnieszka Kurant\, artist; Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, museum director\, exhibition maker\, writer. Event organization by Giulia Colletti of Castello di Rivoli. \nParticipants: Paola Antonelli\, designer\, architect\, and curator; Stefano Buono\, nuclear physicist and co-founder of newcleo; Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, art historian\, Director Castello di Rivoli; Luciano Cinotti\, nuclear scientist; Emanuele Coccia\, philosopher; Beatriz Colomina\, architectural historian\, theorist\, curator; Kate Crawford\, artist and writer; Sophie Cundale\, artist; Agnieszka Kurant\, artist; Renato Leotta\, artist; Sam Lewitt\, artist; Michael Marder\, philosopher; Lea Porsager\, artist; Federico Ronchetti\, nuclear physicist and coordinator of Alice Run at CERN; Himali Singh Soin\, poet and artist; Bruce Sterling\, science fiction author; Ash Thorp\, digital artist\, graphic designer\, and creative director; Ersilia Vaudo Scarpetta\, astrophysicist; Adrián Villar Rojas\, artist; Mark Wigley\, architectural historian\, theorist\, curator; Gilberto Zorio\, artist. \nThe project is supported and co-hosted by newcleo. With thanks to Stefano Buono for his support. \n \n  \nBIOGRAPHIES\n\n \nPaola Antonelli (Sassari\, 1963) is Senior Curator of the Department of Architecture and Design and Founding Director of Research and Development at MoMa New York. Her research focuses on design in all its forms\, expanding its reach to include overlooked objects and practices from architecture to video games. Her exhibitions\, lectures\, and writings contemplate design’s intersection and interaction with other fields such as technology and biology but also popular culture and life—that of individuals\, communities\, all species\, and all planets. Her goal is to promote people’s understanding of design\, until its positive influence on the world is universally acknowledged. \n  \n \nStefano Buono (Avellino\, 1966) is a physicist and CERN alumnus. In 2021\, Buono co-founded the nuclear technology company newcleo\, of which he is currently Managing Director. In 2018\, he founded Elysia Capital\, a Family Office focused on social impact investments in the field of sustainable innovation\, well-being\, education\, art and culture. Buono is President of Planet Holding LTD\, a world leader in social innovation solutions for real estate. He is also President of LIFTT\, a private company that focuses on stimulating and supporting technology transfer from research institutes\, generating a positive impact through the economic investment made from research and innovation plans. \n  \n \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev (Ridgewood\, 1957) is Director of Castello di Rivoli and Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti and Visiting Professor at the University of Basel. She was Artistic Director of the 14th Istanbul Biennial (2015); Artistic Director of dOCUMENTA (13) (2012); Artistic Director of the 16th Sydney Biennale (2008); Chief Curator at MoMa PS1 Contemporary Art Center (1999-2001)\, following a period at Villa Medici\, where she drafted the exhibition summer program (1998-2000). Among her major publications is the catalog of the Cerruti Collection (Allemandi\, 2021) and  the monograph Arte povera (Phaidon Press\, 1999). She received the Audrey Irmas Award for Curatorial Excellence 2019. \n  \n \nLuciano Cinotti (Cerreto Guidi\, 1949) is a nuclear engineer and a leading expert in Fast Reactor technologies. He led the Ansaldo Nucleare activities for the improved European fast reactor and the innovative reactors PIUS and PRISM\, while also conceiving ISIS\, a fully passive reactor for the combined generation of electricity and heat. He is a Euratom Representative and the Chairman of the Lead Fast Reactors Steering Committee of the Generation-IV International Forum from its inception until 2010. He is also the author of most of the world’s LFR-related patents. He is the Scientific Director of newcleo.  \n  \n \nEmanuele Coccia is Associate Professor at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales. He was Visiting Professor at The University of Buenos Aires; Columbia University; Harvard; among others. He is the author of Filosofia della casa. Lo spazio domestico e la felicità (Einaudi\, 2021)\, Métamorphoses (Rivages\, 2020)\, The Life of Plants: A Metaphysics of Mixture (Politi Press\, 2018)\, Sensible Life: A Micro-ontology of the Image (Fordham University Press\, 2016); and co-author of Modern Alchemy with Viviane (JBE Books\, 2022). He co-directed and co-produced the animation videos Quercus with Formafantasma (2019)\, Heaven in Matter with Faye Formisano (2021)\, Portal of Mysteries with Dotdotdot (2022); wrote plays with Frédérique Aït Touati and Duncan Evenou (2022 and 2023); co-produced La Chambre des mémoires à-veniré (2023); contributed to Nous les Arbres (2019) at Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain; edited the catalogs of Triennale di Milano (2023). He is writing a four-handed work on fashion and philosophy with Alessandro Michele. \n  \n \nBeatriz Colomina (Madrid\, 1952) is the Howard Crosby Butler Professor of Architecture at Princeton University. Her books include X-Ray Architecture (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2019)\, Domesticity at War (The MIT Press\, 2007)\, and Privacy and Publicity: Modern Architecture as Media (The MIT Press\, 1996). In Are We Human? Notes on an Archeology of Design (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2016)\, Colomina and Mark Wigley explore ways in which humans have been radically redesigned by technologies. In this framework\, nuclear waste and distribution of nuclear energy are addressed in relationship with humans’ counterintuitive attitude of extinguishing themselves. In the wake of this\, a sense of urgency came over the design community and they researched the notion of survival through counter-design in the post-war era.  \n  \n \nKate Crawford (1976)  is a scholar focusing on the social implications of AI. Her work focuses on large-scale data systems and machine learning in the wider contexts of history and environment. She is a Senior Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research New York\, Research Professor of Communication and STS at USC Annenberg\, and Visiting Chair for AI and Justice at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Her latest book is Atlas of AI (Yale University Press\, 2021) looks at AI with a humanist’s eye and an artist’s sense of what really matters. In this book\, Crawford recalls AI is not all about big data and machine learning\, but rather the natural world. \n  \n \nSophie Cundale (London\, 1987) is an artist and filmmaker currently working on Half Life\, a novella about a woman\, who falls in love with nuclear waste. The intertwining of nuclear matter and sensual appetites links to matters such as self-poisoning\, eating disorders\, and addiction to toxic substances but also to an attractiveness towards current nuclear neglect. Her first major solo show took place at South London Gallery and Bonington Gallery (2020) Her recent and previous works have been presented at Plaza Plaza\, London; Kapp Kapp Gallery\, Philadelphia; Temporary Gallery\, Cologne; Spike Island\, Bristol; Govett-Brewster Gallery\, New Zealand; Catalyst Arts\, AMINI festival\, Belfast; VCD festival\, Beijing; Chisenhale Gallery\, London; Innsbruck Biennale\, Austria; and commissioned by Serpentine Galleries. \n  \n \nAgnieszka Kurant (Łódź\, 1978) is an artist investigating collective and nonhuman intelligences\, the future of labor\, and the exploitations within surveillance capitalism. Her solo exhibitions have been presented at Hannover Kunstverein (2023); Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea (2021-22); SculptureCenter (2013). Her site-specific installations have been commissioned by MIT List Visual Arts Center (2022)\, Guggenheim Museum (2015). She presented an immersive installation with Aleksandra Wasikowska for the Polish Pavilion of the 12th Venice Biennale of Architecture (2010). Her works have been featured in collective exhibitions MoMA; Centre Pompidou; Palais de Tokyo; Guggenheim Bilbao; CAPC Bordeaux; Kunsthalle Wien; Witte de With; Whitechapel Art Gallery; The Kitchen; Triennale di Milano\, among others. \n  \n \nThe research of Renato Leotta (Siracusa-Turin\, 1982) spans from photography\, to video and archival materials\, investigating the relationship between sea\, sky\, and land in an attempt to create a dialogue between the real and the ideal. Leotta won the Italian Council Edition X with CONCERTINO per il mare (2023)\, presented at Castello di Rivoli after his solo exhibition Sole (2020). He participated in the 17th Istanbul Biennial (2023) and was Italian Fellow in Visual Arts at the American Academy in Rome (2019). He recently presented the solo exhibition Sensibilità at Le Quai – Società delle Api\, Monaco (2023). His works have been presented in group exhibitions and biennials including Manifesta12; Gropius Bau Berlin; MAC São Paulo; Palazzo Fortuny Venice. He is co-founder of CRIPTA747 in Turin and Istituto Sicilia. \n  \n \n\nSam Lewitt (Los Angeles\, 1981) investigates systems of meaning—archives\, mediums of communication\, and technologies —as they are manifested materially\, framed by institutions\, and interpreted by subjects. Lewitt excavates industrial\, commercial\, and educational structures to uncover the conditions of their production and their relationship to the context in which they emerged. Works such as CURE (the Work)\, z33 House of Contemporary Art (2021); More Heat than Light\, Kunsthalle Basel and CCA Wattis (2016); and Stranded Assets\, the 57th Venice Biennale (2017); expand his inquiry into the metabolism of production and infrastructure. The latter emerges from a set of lamps found in the stairwell of the recently decommissioned Giuseppe Volpi thermoelectric power plant in Venice’s industrial port of Marghera. \n\n  \n \nMichael Marder (Moscow\, 1980) is Ikerbasque Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country\, UPV/EHU\, Vitoria-Gasteiz. His work spans the fields of environmental philosophy and ecological thought\, political theory\, and phenomenology. Marder has taught at several universities in the United States and Canada\, including Georgetown University\, George Washington University\, Duquesne University\, University of Toronto and University of Saskatchewan. His latest books include The Phoenix Complex: A Philosophy of Nature (MIT Press\, 2023) and\, with Edward S. Casey\, Plants in Place:A Phenomenology of the Vegetal (Columbia University Press\, 2023). Marder is currently working on his forthcoming publication Metamorphoses Reimagined (Columbia University Press\, forthcoming in 2024).  \n  \n \nLea Porsager (Frederikssund\, 1981) is an artist who plays with quantum physics\, tantric practices\, and feminist theory. She interweaves fabulation and materialization within a variety of mediums\, including film\, sculpture\, and text. She was awarded the Mads Øvlisen Postdoc Fellowship (2023). Porsager’s research involves a collaboration with Arts at CERN\, for which she received an Honorary Mention for the Collide International Award (2018). Her earthwork and memorial Gravitational Ripples (2018) was inaugurated in Stockholm\, Sweden\, commemorating the Swedish lives lost in the 2004 tsunami in Southeast Asia. Her solo exhibitions have been presented at Kunsthal Charlottenborg\, Copenhagen (2021); Moderna Museet\, Stockholm (2020-21). She participated in dOCUMENTA (13) and the 14th Istanbul Biennial. Porsager is currently engaged in public art commissions across Denmark\, Norway\, and Sweden.   \n  \n \nFederico Ronchetti (Tivoli\, 1966) is a nuclear physicist at CERN specialized in the development\, production\, and operation of detectors for large HEP experiments. He has extensive experience with data acquisition systems\, hardware and software trigger systems\, and programming for scientific computing. He coordinated the data taking operations of the ALICE project at CERN in critical moments\, i.e.\, after the main upgrades of the detectors and the LHC accelerator. He is currently the technical coordinator at CERN of a parallel computing farm made up of 2800 GPU units used for the compression and synchronous processing of the data recorded by the ALICE detector. This is combined with his commitment to divulgation of science to the general public. \n  \n \nHimali Singh Soin (New Delhi\,1987) is an artist and writer creating metaphors from the natural environment and constructing speculative cosmologies that reveal non-linear entanglements between human and non-human life. She explores the myriad technologies of knowing\, from scientific to alchemical. Her inspirations include the ancient Stoics and contemporary literature\, travel diaries and ancient diagrams. She works across film\, spoken word\, performance\, epistolary poetry\, animation\, music\, ceramic and textile\, which allows her to interweave complex concepts and narratives together. Soin has performed and exhibited at The Art Institute of Chicago; Serpentine Galleries; Dhaka Art Summit\, Dhaka; Somerset House; HKW. She won the India Foundation for the Arts Award and the Frieze Artist Award. \n  \n \nBruce Sterling (Brownsville\, 1954) is a science fiction writer\, net critic\, and cyberspace theorist who emerged as a proponent of the subgenre known as steampunk. Along with William Gibson\, another one of the major figures of cyberpunk\, Bruce Sterling co-authored the novel The Difference Engine (Victor Gollancz Ltd\, 1990)\, forming an alternate—or speculative— history set in 1855 London\, which is anachronistically advanced. Signing with his pseudonym\, in 2015 he published an anthology of stories titled Utopia pirata – i racconti di Bruno Argento (Mondadori\, 2015) taking place in Turin\, where the hackers of parallel city converge or in Fiume\, where hackers attempt the conquest of the world in a tumultuous advance of countercultures. \n  \n \nAsh Thorp (Oceanside\, 1983) is a digital artist\, creative director\, and concept illustrator. He collaborates with the film industry\, experimenting with 3D modeling\, VFX\, motion graphics and contributing to movies such as Prometheus (2012); The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014); The Batman (2022); among others. He is also known for creating his own digital artworks\, unique 1/1 NFT short videos (usually circa 24’’ long) like Degradation (2021); the series  Evident Mirror (2021); short films\, such as Evinetta (2020);  the limited-run online multi-part short film Chimera (2023)\, and the new abstract short film Diamond Eye (2023); among others. In his most recent NFT series\, Nascent (2023)\, he questions the human condition in an era characterized by a rampant dependence on technology. Chimera unfolds at the intersection between disturbing accidents and uncanny encounters with aliens. Bending the time-space dimension\, Thorp plays with the allure of post-apocalyptic scenarios\, inviting the audience to engage with their inner fears and future imaginaries.  \n  \n \nErsilia Vaudo has a degree in Astrophysics and has been working at the European Space Agency since 1991. During her career\, she held various roles in the field of strategy\, and worked for several years at the ESA office in Washington DC\, where she was in charge of relations with NASA. She was the Curator of the XXII International Exhibition of the Milan Triennale on the theme Unknown Unknowns. An introduction to mysteries (2022). Ersilia Vaudo is President and co-founder of the association Il Cielo itinerante to promote STEM in areas where educational inclusion is lacking. She has recently published Mirabilis. Cinque intuizioni (più altre in arrivo) che hanno rivoluzionato la nostra idea di Universo (Einaudi\, 2023).   \n  \n \nAdrián Villar Rojas (Rosario\, 1980) conceives long term projects\, collectively and collaboratively produced that take the shape of large-scale and site-specific environments. Within his research and worldbuilding\, which mixes sculpture\, drawing\, video\, literature and performative traces\, Villar Rojas brings together the human and more-than-human realms while investigating the fragile and temporary nature of human civilization. His recent exhibitions include The End of Imagination\, Art Gallery of New South Wales\, Sydney (2022); El fin de la imaginación\, The Bass\, Miami (2022); Poems for Earthlings\, Oude Kerk\, Amsterdam (2019); The Theater of Disappearance\, The Geffen Contemporary at Moca\, Los Angeles (2017); NEON at Athens National Observatory\, Greece (2017); and have been presented at Kunsthaus Bregenz (2017); The Metropolitan Museum of Art (2017); among other institutions.  \n  \n \nMark Wigley (Palmerston North\, 1959) is Professor of Architecture at Columbia University. His books include Konrad Wachsmann’s Television: Post-Architectural Transmissions (Sternberg Press\, 2021)\, Cutting Matta-Clark: The Anarchitecture Investigation (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2018)\, and Buckminster Fuller Inc.: Architecture in the Age of Radio (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2015). In their landmark book Are We Human? Notes on an Archeology of Design (Lars Müller Publishers\, 2016)\, Wigley and Beatriz Colomina explored the way that the human species has always been continuously and radically redesigned by its technologies. In this frame\, the question of nuclear waste and the distribution of nuclear energy is addressed in relationship with the human species counterintuitive attitude of extinguishing itself – we essentially designed our own exit. In the wake of this\, a sense of urgency came over the design community\, and they researched the notion of survival through new kinds of design and counter-design in the post-war years. \n  \n \nGilberto Zorio (Andorno Micca\, 1944) is one of the artists associated with the movement formed in the mid-sixties in Italy\, Arte povera. Energy is constantly running through Zorio’s entire research and makes the matter of the works perpetually changeable. From 1967 to today\, Zorio has presented in solo exhibitions at the Kunstmuseum (1976); Stedelijk Museum (1979); Venice Biennale (1978\, 1980\, 1986\, 1995\, 1997); Kunstverein (1985); Center d’Art Contemporain of Geneva and Center Georges Pompidou (1986); Tel Aviv Museum and Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum (1987); Museu Serralves (1990); Documenta and Musèe d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporain (1992); Dia: Center for the Arts (2001); Milton Keynes Gallery (2008); MAMbo (2009); MACRO (2010); Rivoli Castle (2017); among other institutions.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/energy-cultures-energies-imaginaries-currencies-and-nuclear-horizons-of-the-planet-a-21st-century-meeting-of-artists-scientists-and-philosophers/
CATEGORIES:conferenza
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/20230114_112718-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230928T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20230928T193000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230726T100620Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T151202Z
UID:132903-1695924000-1695929400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:The Experience of Art. Fabio Belloni talks about Gino de Dominicis
DESCRIPTION:The Experience of Art\n\n28 September 2023\, 6pm* – 7.30pm\nFabio Belloni\, Gino de Dominicis\nSala delle Orchidee – Villa Cerruti \nOn 28 September 2023\, from 6pm to 7.30pm\, Fabio Belloni\, Professor of Contemporary Art History at the University of Turin\, will analyze Untitled (Mona Lisa)\, 1992\, by Gino de Dominicis. The work belongs to a series of drawings on poplar boards made from the second half of the 1980s\, drawing inspiration from the enigmatic figure of Leonardo da Vinci’s La Gioconda. These are the years in which\, in De Dominicis’ artistic career\, the transition from the first conceptual and performative season to the more mature one of painting and installation takes place. \n* Tickets must be collected by 5.45pm at Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office \nThe conferences\, for a maximum of 16 people\, are held in the Sala delle Orchidee of Villa Cerruti and include a special visit to the Villa.\nReservation is required on the page https://www.castellodirivoli.org/tickets/#\nThe cost of the full ticket is € 26.50; reduced ticket € 19.50 (journalists\, groups of 3 or more people\, Abbonamento Musei Piemonte Valle d’Aosta); € 10.00 for university students up to the age of 26 and equivalent institutions. The ticket includes admission to Castello di Rivoli which can be visited on the same day\, before the meeting. The Museum closes at 5.30pm\, but it is possible to go to the Ticket Office in the Manica Lunga until 5.45pm.\nThe shuttle to the Cerruti Collection leaves at 5.55pm from the square in front of Castello di Rivoli.\nTo collect the ticket\, it is necessary to go to the Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office at least 15 minutes before the departure of the shuttle. \n \nFabio Belloni\nAssociate Professor of Contemporary Art History\, Università degli Studi di Torino. He studied at the Università degli Studi di Udine and was a post-doctoral fellow at the CIMA – Center for Italian Modern Art in New York. His publications include: Militanza artistica in Italia\, 1968-1972 (Rome 2015); “L’ultimo quadro di storia”\, in Renato Guttuso. L’arte rivoluzionaria nel cinquantenario del ’68 (Milan 2018); Giulio Paolini\, Disegno geometrico\, 1960 (Turin-Mantua 2019); Maurizio Fagiolo dell’Arco critico d’arte militante\, 1964-1980 (Milan 2021).
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/the-experience-of-art-fabio-belloni-talks-about-gino-de-dominicis/
CATEGORIES:Collezione Cerruti,conferenza
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Screenshot-2023-09-01-at-22.55.42.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231007T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231007T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230911T121933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T151040Z
UID:134738-1696676400-1696701600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Nineteenth Giornata del Contemporaneo
DESCRIPTION:Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea participates in the Nineteenth Contemporary Art Day promoted by AMACI \nSaturday\, October 7\, 2023\, 11 am – 6 pm \nAlice Visentin\, winner of the first edition of the Collective Art Prize\, will be in conversation with Marcella Beccaria. The conversation will be introduced by Renata Novarese\, President of the Friends of the Rivoli Castle. Maria Adelaide Marchesoni\, President of Collective\, will join the event. \nTheater\, 5 pm \nCastello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea is part of the Nineteenth Giornata del Contemporaneo\, the major event promoted by AMACI – the Association of Italian Contemporary Art Museums – with the support of the General Directorate for Contemporary Creativity of the Ministry of Culture and the collaboration of the General Directorate for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation\, and the patronage of the Conference of Regions and Autonomous Provinces\, UPI – Union of Italian Provinces\, ANCI – National Association of Italian Municipalities\, and ICOM Italy. \nOn Saturday\, October 7\, 2023\, the public will be able to visit the Museum\, exhibitions\, and participate in initiatives organized to celebrate the Nineteenth Giornata del Contemporaneo. \nOn the occasion of Nineteenth Giornata del Contemporaneo\, the Museum is organizing a conversation with the artist Alice Visentin\, winner of the first edition of the Collective International Art Prize for the Rivoli Castle\, and Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of Collections\, Vice President of AMACI. The conversation will be introduced by Renata Novarese\, President of the Friends of the Rivoli Castle. Maria Adelaide Marchesoni\, President of Collective\, the Italian association of contemporary art collectors established in 2019\, will also join the event. \nThe event will take place in the Museum Theater at 5 pm. \nThe conversation will be an opportunity to present the Collective Prize for the first time. The biennial initiative in 2022 allowed the entry into the Museum’s permanent collection\, as a donation from Collective members\, of the work “Banda di fiori (Notturno)\,” 2021\, by Alice Visentin. Rooted deeply in her native territory\, Visentin’s art draws inspiration from oral traditions\, fragments of history\, and fantastical elements. “Banda di fiori (Notturno)” is an important series of paintings composed of 5 canvases. Emerging from the darkness of night\, the flowers depicted in each canvas become a “metaphor for the human condition\, connected to the physical and transcendental universe. Through the natural image of flowers and the night\, both archetypes and symbols of a collective unconscious\,” the artist states\, “I imagined the roots descending into the earth\, while leaves and petals extend upwards\, towards star-filled skies. Among the stems\, leaves\, and petals\, plants offer us tiny phrases and words as if they were oracles or advice.” \nLocated on the third floor of the Museum\, the exhibition Artists in a Time of War: From Francisco Goya to Salvador Dalí\, Pablo Picasso\, Lee Miller\, Zoran Mušič\, Alberto Burri\, Fabio Mauri\, Bracha L. Ettinger\, Anri Sala\, Michael Rakowitz\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Vu Giang Huong\, Rahraw Omarzad\, and Nikita Kadan\, curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev and Marianna Vecellio\, presents over 140 works by 39 artists created by those who were or are in war. Empathetic and poignant\, they express discomfort but also great humanity. The exhibition takes inspiration from Desastres de la Guerra (The Disasters of War)\, 1810-1815\, by Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes and explores the theme of war and post-traumatic subjectivity through historical works and new projects by important contemporary artists. “Artists at War” includes loans from significant Italian and international public and private institutions\, as well as two new commissions: unpublished works created for the occasion by Afghan artist Rahraw Omarzad (Kabul\, 1964) and Ukrainian artist Nikita Kadan (Kiev\, 1982). Both artists share a practice linked to cultural promotion\, offering a message of great emotional\, human\, social\, and political impact. Originating from conflict scenarios and profound geopolitical changes\, their practices invite us to reflect on the importance of finding narratives of care and peace in creative expression. \nThe exhibition Renato Leotta: CONCERTINO per il mare\, located in the north tower on the second floor of the Museum\, presents for the first time in Italy the project that won the Italian Council Edition X\, an international competition promoted by the General Directorate for Contemporary Creativity of the Ministry of Culture in support of Italian contemporary creativity. The project CONCERTINO per il mare is rooted in the observation of the Mediterranean seabed ecosystem. Proposing a possible form of interspecies communication\, it attempts to translate the internal structure of Posidonia oceanica leaves into a musical score to be performed as a concert audible to the human ear. Bringing attention to the vital importance of an endangered ecosystem\, CONCERTINO per il mare invites us to listen to stories of migration\, adaptation\, encounters\, and struggles for the survival of Posidonia through time\, from a distant past to an uncertain future. The work was first presented in September 2022 at the 17th Istanbul Biennial\, where it was installed in the Hammam Çinili\, a 16th-century Ottoman building. \nA comprehensive artistic project\, including an extensive research phase across multiple Mediterranean coastal sites\, CONCERTINO per il mare has generated a sound installation\, experimental photographic works\, and Ondina\, a concert-opera. On display at the Museum\, will be the sound installation curated by Marcella Beccaria and presented for the first time in dialogue with a series of photographic prints created by the artist using experimental techniques. As part of the project\, Ondina: Concert per il mare in tre movimenti\, curated by Marianna Vecellio\, will be performed by the Turin Philharmonic Orchestra\, conducted by Giampaolo Pretto. The live concert will take place at the Concert Hall of the Giuseppe Verdi State Conservatory of Music in Turin (Saturday\, November 4\, 9 pm)\, following its debut in September 2022 with musicians from the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra during the opening days of the Istanbul Biennial.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/nineteenth-giornata-del-contemporaneo/
LOCATION:Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea
CATEGORIES:conferenza,CRRI,Dipartimento Curatoriale
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231026T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231026T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231016T200825Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T150926Z
UID:135343-1698325200-1698328800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Torino | Parlare d’Arte.2 | OCTOBER 26\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \n  \nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\n\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n  \n26 OCTOBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Lee Miller and Artists in a Time of War\n\nThe lunch talk examines photographs taken by Lee Miller during World War II and introduces additional artists who lived through wartime contexts and decanted even photographic accounts of the war. \nReservation required: torino@gallerieditalia.com or toll-free number 800 167 619 The activity costs € 22 and includes a lunch box by Costardi Bros and the entrance ticket to the museum.  \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-october-26-2023/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231026T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231005T131417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T150739Z
UID:135034-1698325200-1702562400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Turin | Parlare d’Arte .2
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \n\nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\n\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n  \n26 OCTOBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Lee Miller and Artists in a Time of War\n\nThe lunch talk examines photographs taken by Lee Miller during World War II and introduces additional artists who lived through wartime contexts and decanted even photographic accounts of the war. \n  \n9 NOVEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarcella Beccaria\, Otobong Nkanga\n\nThe meeting delves into Otobong Nkanga’s art and the ways in which the artist\, starting with his early photographic work\, addresses important issues such as the exploitation of natural resources and the distance that in many cases separates human beings from the planet that hosts them. \n  \n16 NOVEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarianna Vecellio\, Fabio Mauri\n\nThe event is dedicated to Roman artist and intellectual Fabio Mauri and explores his relationship with cinema\, and the use and reuse of photos and films to tell the story and memory of human beings. \n  \n30 NOVEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Atlantic Thoughts on the São Paulo Biennial 2023\n\nAtlantic Thoughts on Choreographies of the Impossible\, 35th edition of the São Paulo Biennial\, curated by Diane Lima\, Grada Kilomba\, Hélio Menezes\, and Manuel Borja-Villel and currently ongoing. The history and development of decolonial viewpoints from Okwui Enwezor to the present. \n  \n7 DECEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarianna Vecellio\, Giuseppe Penone / Paolo Pellion di Persano\, Jannis Kounellis / Claudio Abate\, Giovanni Anselmo / Paolo Mussat Sartor and Marisa Merz / diverse photographers. For an image of the life of art\, photography in art at the turn of the 1960s and 1970s.\n\nThe lunch talk addresses the use of photography in Arte Povera\, Conceptual Art\, and Land Art at the turn of the 1960s and 1970s. \n  \n14 DECEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarcella Beccaria\, Light in art\n\nFrom Caravaggio onward\, a journey to discover light in the history of art\, not forgetting the birth of photography as an original form of “light writing”.\n\nReservation required: torino@gallerieditalia.com or toll-free number 800 167 619 The activity costs € 22 and includes a lunch box by Costardi Bros and the entrance ticket to the museum.  \n  \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-2023/
LOCATION:Gallerie d’Italia\, P.za S. Carlo\, 156 10121 Italia\, Torino\,\, Torino\, 10121\, Italia
CATEGORIES:conferenza
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231026T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231026T193000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231002T075047Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T150121Z
UID:134874-1698343200-1698348600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:The Experience of Art. Virginia Bertone talks about Antonio Fontanesi
DESCRIPTION:The Experience of Art\n26 October 2023\, 6pm* – 7.30pm\nVirginia Bertone\, I dipinti di Antonio Fontanesi nella Collezione Cerruti\nSala delle Orchidee – Villa Cerruti \nOn 26 October 2023\, from 6pm to 7.30pm\, Virginia Bertone\, Chief Conservator of the permanent collections of the GAM – Civic Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art of Turin and Managing Director of the Palazzo Madama – Civic Museum of Ancient Art of Turin\, will focus on the group of five paintings by Antonio Fontanesi\, one of the greatest innovators of landscape painting of the 19th century. The works collected by Cerruti will allow us to retrace his entire career. \nThe conferences\, for a maximum of 16 people\, are held in the Sala delle Orchidee of Villa Cerruti and include a special visit to the Villa.\nReservation is required on the page https://www.castellodirivoli.org/tickets/#\nThe cost of the full ticket is € 26.50; reduced ticket € 19.50 (journalists\, groups of 3 or more people\, Abbonamento Musei Piemonte Valle d’Aosta); € 10.00 for university students up to the age of 26 and equivalent institutions. The ticket includes admission to Castello di Rivoli which can be visited on the same day\, before the meeting. The Museum closes at 5.30pm\, but it is possible to go to the Ticket Office in the Manica Lunga until 5.45pm.\nThe shuttle to the Cerruti Collection leaves at 5.55pm from the square in front of Castello di Rivoli.\nTo collect the ticket\, it is necessary to go to the Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office at least 15 minutes before the departure of the shuttle. \n* Tickets must be collected by 5.45pm at Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office \n \nVirginia Bertone\n\nChief curator of the permanent collections\, managing director of the Biblioteca d’Arte e Archivio Fotografico\, GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea\, Turin\, and managing director\, Palazzo Madama – Museo d’Arte Antica\, Turin. She graduated in Medieval Art History under Enrico Castelnuovo at the Università degli Studi di Torino. She has also studied 19th- and early 20th-century art and has curated exhibitions on Italian landscape painting\, Massimo d’Azeglio and Antonio Fontanesi. \n[Image: Antonio Fontanesi\, Autunno (Autumn)\, c. 1874-1875\, Collection Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti per l’Arte\, long-term loan Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, Rivoli-Turin\, ph. Alessandro Fiamingo]
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/the-experience-of-art-virginia-bertone-talks-about-antonio-fontanesi/
CATEGORIES:Collezione Cerruti,conferenza
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Antonio-Fontanesi_Autunno_1874-75-c..png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231101T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231101T190000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231031T222032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145944Z
UID:136366-1698861600-1698865200@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Many of One. Michelangelo Pistoletto in conversation with Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev
DESCRIPTION:On the occasion of the opening of Michelangelo Pistoletto’s exhibition Many of One\, the artist will be in conversation with Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev.\nThe conversation will focus on Pistoletto’s practice and the creation of the exhibition. \nFree access subject to availability.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/many-of-one-michelangelo-pistoletto-in-conversation-with-carolyn-christov-bakargiev/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/2005_2020_love_difference_amare_le_differenze-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231101T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231101T210000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231031T222926Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145853Z
UID:136368-1698867000-1698872400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Arte povera. Notes for History
DESCRIPTION:On the occasion of the opening of the exhibition Michelangelo Pistoletto. Molti di uno (Many of One)\, Castello di Rivoli premieres the docufilm Arte povera: Notes for History\, aired on Sky Arte and on demand on November 28\, 2023. \nDirected by Andrea Bettinetti and narrated by Giuseppe Cederna\, Arte povera: Notes for History is a collaboration between Michele Bongiorno (Good Day Films) and Sky Arte\, with support from Gruppo Unipol\, Azimut\, the Giancarlo and Danna Olgiati Collection\, Christian Stein Gallery\, and the Film Commission Torino. Featuring an unpublished conversation with Germano Celant held in 2019 at the Fondazione Prada in Ca’ Corner\, Venice\, it also includes interviews with Giulio Paolini\, Giuseppe Penone\, Michelangelo Pistoletto\, Gilberto Zorio\, Pier Paolo Calzolari\, Giovanni Anselmo\, Michelle Coudray\, Lia Rumma\, Antonio Tucci Russo\, Fabio Sargentini\, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Beatrice Merz\, Silvia Fabro\, Paolo Mussat Sartor\, Gianfranco Benedetti\, and Giorgio Colombo. \nFirst comes the human being and then the system\, or that’s how it was in antiquity. Today\, however\, society presumes to make pre-packaged human beings\, ready for consumption. Anyone can propose reform\, criticize\, violate\, and demystify\, but always with the obligation to remain within the system. It is forbidden to be free. This is the incipit of Arte povera. Notes on a guerrilla war\, a manifesto by Germano Celant published in Flash Art number 5 in 1967. It marked a radical departure from traditional art\, advocating for a guerrilla-style movement\, rejecting formal techniques and embracing humble materials like earth\, wood\, iron\, and industrial waste. \nIt is a radical criticism that uses the language of contemporary society and also resorts to the use of installation and performative work. Celant’s intuition facilitates the aggregation of artists with different sensibilities\, who individually experiment with their own language under a feeling strongly opposed to the cultural hegemony of the moment. \nThe relevance of Arte povera poetics comes to life in the docufilm presented on November 1st at Castello di Rivoli and then broadcasted on November 28th on Sky Arte and on demand. The 90-minute docufilm\, directed by Andrea Bettinetti\, is a work on what is considered the most important contribution to post-war art in Italy. The ambitious project was born from an idea by Michele Bongiorno of Good Day Films. «We created an unprecedented project – the producer states in an interview to la Lettura – which required unthinkable commitment and energy\, but the result is truly remarkable. An effort that lasted more than three years\, which generated an incredible amount of documents and allowed us to rediscover wonderful archive material.” \nInitially Michele Bongiorno contacted Germano Celant and proposed a film-story in which the critic would retrace the history of the movement firsthand. Together they wrote the story and conducted a couple of interviews\, but a few months later\, at the beginning of 2020\, the exceptional nature of the events due to the pandemic and the sudden death of the art critic put the work on hold. The project had to be modified: no longer a trip with Celant but rather starting from his last interview\, to then collect the voices of the protagonists to make a choral work\, a meticulous report that traces its history from 1967 to today. \nThe film sheds lights on the innovative aspect of the movement and the irreverent strength of a group of young artists who stir up the cultural world\, profoundly impacting the growth of contemporary art. «The voice of Giuseppe Cederna accompanies us through the studios and foundations\, the galleries and museums that host the most important collections – states Bongiorno –\, from Rivoli to the Magazzino Italian Art Museum in New York\, in a long fascinating conversation with the protagonists of this extraordinary artistic research.” \nEveryone has followed a path of experimentation and individual growth such as to think that the heart of the movement is a set of artistic propulsions similar to each other\, not for the language chosen but for an attitude. Michelangelo Pistoletto (1933) with the Mirror Paintings invents a new perspective dimension; Mario Merz (1925-2003) uses the shape of the igloo which reminds us of the primordial stage of man immersed in nature; Marisa Merz (1926-2019)\, the only woman of the movement\, creates weaves with copper and nylon threads and organic and subtle\, delicate and light works; Pino Pascali (1935-1968)\, in his short life\, proposed in a playful way the elements of his Mediterranean roots\, the fields\, the sea\, the land\, the animals; Giuseppe Penone (1947) uses unusual materials for his sculptures\, tree trunks\, lead\, copper and more; Gilberto Zorio (1944) creates sculptures with a strong symbolic impact in which the star and the javelin are recurring\, representing the metaphysical world and death; Giulio Paolini (1940) crosses a conceptual dimension that tends towards the classical tradition inspired by “beauty”; Alighiero Boetti (1940-1994)\, ranges without borders from tapestries to postal works\, to ballpoint pens\, to inks\, in the belief that there are no rules for creating a work of art. But it is impossible to mention them all here. \nThe city of Turin\, where almost all the artists come from\, played a pivotal role for the movement\, as an industrial capital providing the humus and motivations for dissent and protest. Sensitive to the artistic avant-garde\, Christian Stein Gallery played a fundamental role in understanding the extent of the phenomenon of Arte povera and accompanied it into the art market. \nProduced by Michele BONGIORNO\nProduced for Sky by Roberto PISONI\, Dino VANNINI\, Gaia PASETTO\nNarrated by Giuseppe CEDERNA\nOriginal music Fabio BAROVERO\nPhotography Massimo SCHIAVON\nMovie editing Giovanna FERRARA\nScientific advice Antonella SOLDAINI\nColorist Fabio COLOMBO\nIconographic research Francesca LACROCE\nSound Roberto REMORINO\, Simone BRIZIO \nProduction Sky Original \n \nGood Day Films by Andrea Bettinetti \n \nThe docufilm was aired on Sky Arte
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/arte-povera-notes-for-history/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Screenshot-2023-10-31-at-23.28.41.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231103T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231103T173000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230919T075143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145808Z
UID:134462-1699029000-1699032600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Castello di Rivoli at Artissima | Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev Curator of the exhibition Michelangelo Pistoletto. Molti di uno (Many of One)\, in conversation with the artist
DESCRIPTION:Friday November 3  4\,30 pm  – Meeting Point \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Director and Curator of the exhibition Michelangelo Pistoletto. Molti di uno (Many of One)\, in conversation with the artist \nThe conversation will be held in Italian \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev with the artist will introduce the exhibition Michelangelo Pistoletto. Molti di uno (Many of one)\, set up in the Castello di Rivoli Manica Lunga\, a large unpublished work that acts as a device through which to reread Pistoletto’s art (Biella\, 1933). Among the artists who redefined the concept of art starting from the mid-sixties of the last century\, Pistoletto questioned the concept of personal identity from the first half of the fifties and took the path of the self-portrait as an emblematic expression of his thought. In 1961 he painted his first mirror painting Il presente (The Present) in which his self-portrait stands out against a black background obtained with very shiny acrylic paint which makes it reflective. This work opens up to life as an exchange of relationships and perspectives\, determining a new space-time dimension. For Pistoletto\, overcoming the boundaries marked by the pictorial dimension represents the opening to a landscape that overlooks the contemporaneity of existence. \n  \n \nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev \nCastello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Director and Artistic Director  Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti \nPhoto Andrea Guermani \n  \n \nMichelangelo Pistoletto \nPhoto Pierluigi Di Pietro \n  \nMichelangelo Pistoletto \nVenere degli stracci (Venus of the Rags)\, 1967 \nreproduction of Venus in cement covered in mica\, rags \nVenus\,  installation\, 150 x 280 x 100 cm \nFondazione per l’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea CRT \non loan to Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, Rivoli-Torino \n  \n 
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/castello-di-rivoli-at-artissima/
LOCATION:Artissima
CATEGORIES:conferenza,Dipartimento Curatoriale
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/pistoletto.lavenere.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231103T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231103T184500
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230919T081129Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145553Z
UID:134475-1699034400-1699037100@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Castello di Rivoli at Artissima. Marcella Beccaria presents the publication
DESCRIPTION:November  3\, 6 pm\nBook Corner \nOn the occasion of Artissima\, Marcella Beccaria will present the catalog published on the occasion of Nkanga’s solo exhibitions Of Cords Curling around Mountains at Castello di Rivoli and When Looking Across the Sea\, Do You Dream? at Villa Arson Nice. Using a variety of methodologies\, materials\, and techniques\, the works of Otobong Nkanga (Kano\, Nigeria\, 1974) address urgent issues related to the ecological crisis and the environment\, the exploitation of resources and sustainability\, also delving deep into the consequences of colonialism and its repercussions on the social fabric. In addition to unpublished poems by the artist\, this book includes new essays by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev and Marcella Beccaria\, and an interview with the artist by Éric Mangion. The catalogue documents the two exhibitions with entries on all the artworks and installation views. It also includes a scholarly chronology covering the artist’s exhibition history from her debut in 1995 up to the present. The anthology contains seminal essays by Anne Barlow\, Okwui Enwezor\, Natasha Ginwala\, Emanuele Guidi\, Nav Haq\, M. Neelika Jayawardane\, Mwenya B. Kabwe\, Omar Kholeif\, Yvette Mutumba\, Bonaventure Ndikung\, Philippe Pirotte\, Stephanie Rosenthal\, Jérôme Sans\, Bisi Silva\, Danielle Tilkin\, and Helen Welford. \nThe conversation is in English. \n  \n\nMarcella Beccaria\nPhoto Andrea Guermani Courtesy Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, Rivoli-Torino \n  \n\nOtobong Nkanga\nPhoto Sebastiano Pellion di Persano
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/otobong-artissima-2023/
LOCATION:Artissima
CATEGORIES:conferenza,Dipartimento Curatoriale
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/IMG_5591.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231104T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231104T203000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230629T082632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145214Z
UID:135141-1699124400-1699129800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Renato Leotta Ondina
DESCRIPTION:SOLD OUT \nCastello di Rivoli presents Ondina by Renato Leotta at the Concert Hall of the “Giuseppe Verdi” State Conservatory of Music\, Turin. \nThe concert work is performed by the Turin Philharmonic Orchestra\, conducted by maestro Giampaolo Pretto\, and is the result of an arrangement in collaboration with Federico Bisozzi. Curated by Marianna Vecellio\, Ondina proposes a form of vertical inter-species communication\, from the sea to the sky\, through the plant-individual relationship. In the context of the exhibition Renato Leotta. CONCERTINO per il mare at Castello di Rivoli\, curated by Marcella Beccaria\, the project was created thanks to the support of the General Directorate for Contemporary Creativity of the Ministry of Culture as part of the Italian Council program (2021). The work was presented for the first time in September 2022\, at the 17th Istanbul Biennial\, performed by the musicians of the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra. \nWe thank Silvia Fiorucci for supporting the exhibition catalogue/disc.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/renato-leotta-ondina/
LOCATION:Conservatorio Statale di Musica Giuseppe Verdi di Torino\, Piazza Giambattista Bodoni\, Torino\, 10128\, Italia
CATEGORIES:concerto,Dipartimento Curatoriale
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231109T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231109T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231016T201054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145158Z
UID:135345-1699534800-1699538400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Torino | Parlare d’Arte.2 | NOVEMBER 9\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\n\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n9 NOVEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarcella Beccaria\, Otobong Nkanga\n\nThe meeting delves into Otobong Nkanga’s art and the ways in which the artist\, starting with his early photographic work\, addresses important issues such as the exploitation of natural resources and the distance that in many cases separates human beings from the planet that hosts them. \nReservation required: torino@gallerieditalia.com or toll-free number 800 167 619 The activity costs € 22 and includes a lunch box by Costardi Bros and the entrance ticket to the museum.  \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-gdi-torino-parlare-darte-2-november-9-2023/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Lunch_Talk_02.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231113T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231113T200000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231113T115101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T145022Z
UID:136864-1699891200-1699905600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev @Kunstfaglige Inspirations-dag 2023 Novo Nordisk Fondens
DESCRIPTION:November 13\, at 4 pm\, Director of Castello di Rivoli Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev gives a lecture titled Prolegomena to a theory on artistic freedom in the framework of Kunstfaglige Inspirations-dag 2023 promoted by Novo Nordisk Fondens. \nMore info \n  \n 
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/carolyn-christov-bakargiev-kunstfaglige-inspirations-dag-2023-novo-nordisk-fondens/
CATEGORIES:conferenza
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/WhatsApp-Image-2023-11-13-at-12.50.13.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231116T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231116T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231016T201451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T144642Z
UID:135347-1700139600-1700143200@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Torino | Parlare d’Arte.2 | NOVEMBER 16\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\n\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n16 NOVEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarianna Vecellio\, Fabio Mauri\n\nThe event is dedicated to Roman artist and intellectual Fabio Mauri and explores his relationship with cinema\, and the use and reuse of photos and films to tell the story and memory of human beings. \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-november-16-2023/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Lunch_Talk_03.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231123T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231123T193000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231026T083205Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T144356Z
UID:135976-1700760600-1700767800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:The Experience of Art. Maurizio Aceto\, Francesca Robotti e Patrizia Davit read the collection of illuminated books under the lens of chemistry
DESCRIPTION:The Experience of Art\n23 November 2023\, 6pm* – 7.30pm\nMaurizio Aceto\, Francesca Robotti and Patrizia Davit\, La collezione dei volumi miniati sotto la lente della chimica\nSala delle Orchidee – Villa Cerruti \nOn 23 November 2023\, from 6pm to 7.30pm\, Maurizio Aceto and Francesca Robotti of the University of Eastern Piedmont and Patrizia Davit of the University of Turin will tell the public about the campaign of diagnostic investigations carried out on the nucleus of illuminated books and ancient decorated books from the Cerruti Collection. These investigations are aimed at evaluating the decorative elements of each book on the basis of the commodity value and the origin of the pictorial materials used\, at confirming the dating and the historical-artistic attribution and finally at evaluating the state of health of the decorations. \nThe conferences\, for a maximum of 16 people\, are held in the Sala delle Orchidee of Villa Cerruti and include a special visit to the Villa.\nReservation is required on the page https://www.castellodirivoli.org/tickets/#\nThe cost of the full ticket is € 26.50; reduced ticket € 19.50 (journalists\, groups of 3 or more people\, Abbonamento Musei Piemonte Valle d’Aosta); € 10.00 for university students up to the age of 26 and equivalent institutions. The ticket includes admission to Castello di Rivoli which can be visited on the same day\, before the meeting. The Museum closes at 5.30pm\, but it is possible to go to the Ticket Office in the Manica Lunga until 5.45pm.\nThe shuttle to the Cerruti Collection leaves at 5.55pm from the square in front of Castello di Rivoli.\nTo collect the ticket\, it is necessary to go to the Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office at least 15 minutes before the departure of the shuttle. \n* Tickets must be collected by 5.45pm at Castello di Rivoli Ticket Office \n  \n\nMaurizio Aceto\n\nProfessor of Analytical Chemistry\, Università del Piemonte Orientale. For several years he has been involved in analysis in the field of cultural heritage and in particular of illuminated manuscripts\, in order to evaluate their authenticity\, value\, state of conservation\, geographical origin and dating. In this context\, it has developed collaborations with renowned Italian and European libraries. \n\nFrancesca Robotti\n\nDoctor in Chemistry\, Università del Piemonte Orientale. She carried out a thesis concerning the sustainable dyeing of fabrics using Folium\, and is about to graduate in Chemical Sciences with a thesis on the diagnostics of a choral collection commissioned by Pope Pius V and preserved at Museo Civico of Alessandria. \n\nPatrizia Davit\n\nResearch technician\, Chemistry Department\, Università di Torino. She has a degree in Chemistry and a PhD in Chemical Sciences\, with a thesis on the use of analytical techniques in the study of ceramic materials and ancient glass. Her main research activity concerns the characterization\, the evaluation of the production technology\, the study of provenance and the analysis of the phenomena of degradation of archaeological\, historical and artistic materials. She also deals with the teaching of chemistry and scientific dissemination. She is co-author of over fifty contributions on journals\, monographs and printed volumes and of eighty communications at national and international congresses. \n[Image: Book of Hours of Ippolita Maria Sforza\, Florence\, c. 1480-1488\, Collection Fondazione Francesco Federico Cerruti per l’Arte\, long-term loan Castello di Rivoli\, Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, Rivoli-Turin. Ph. Ernani Orcorte] \n 
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lesperienza-dellarte-maurizio-aceto-francesca-robotti-e-patrizia-davit-parlano-de-la-collezione-dei-volumi-miniati-sotto-la-lente-della-chimica/
CATEGORIES:Collezione Cerruti,conferenza
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/A-617_Libro-dore_ph.-Ernani-Orcorte-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231130T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231130T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231016T201754Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231020T150119Z
UID:135355-1701349200-1701352800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Torino | Parlare d’Arte.2 | NOVEMBER 30\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n30 NOVEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm)\nCarolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Atlantic Thoughts on the São Paulo Biennial 2023\nAtlantic Thoughts on Choreographies of the Impossible\, 35th edition of the São Paulo Biennial\, curated by Diane Lima\, Grada Kilomba\, Hélio Menezes\, and Manuel Borja-Villel and currently ongoing. The history and development of decolonial viewpoints from Okwui Enwezor to the present. \nReservation required: torino@gallerieditalia.com or toll-free number 800 167 619 The activity costs € 22 and includes a lunch box by Costardi Bros and the entrance ticket to the museum.  \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-november-30-2023/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Lunch_Talk_04.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231207T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231207T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231016T202034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T143930Z
UID:135349-1701954000-1701957600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Torino | Parlare d’Arte.2 | DECEMBER 7\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n7 DECEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm)\nMarianna Vecellio\, Giuseppe Penone / Paolo Pellion di Persano\, Jannis Kounellis / Claudio Abate\, Giovanni Anselmo / Paolo Mussat Sartor and Marisa Merz / diverse photographers. For an image of the life of art\, photography in art at the turn of the 1960s and 1970s.\nThe lunch talk addresses the use of photography in Arte Povera\, Conceptual Art\, and Land Art at the turn of the 1960s and 1970s. \nReservation required: torino@gallerieditalia.com or toll-free number 800 167 619 The activity costs € 22 and includes a lunch box by Costardi Bros and the entrance ticket to the museum.  \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-december-7-2023/
CATEGORIES:conferenza,Dipartimento Curatoriale
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231208T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240106T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231128T115314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231219T093535Z
UID:136982-1702033200-1704564000@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Holidays 2023
DESCRIPTION:Castello di Rivoli  holidays opening hours  \nFriday  December 8th  11am to 6pm \nSunday  December 24th   11am to 5pm \nMonday  December 25st  CLOSED \nSunday December 31st    11am to 5pm \nMonday January 1st       CLOSED \n  \nCerruti collection \nThe last entry on Sunday 24th and Sunday 31st December will be at 4.15pm.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/festivita-al-castello-di-rivoli-2023/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231214T140000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231016T202234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T143704Z
UID:135353-1702558800-1702562400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Lunch Talks @ GDI – Torino | Parlare d’Arte.2 | DECEMBER 14\, 2023
DESCRIPTION:A program by Castello di Rivoli in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino\nFrom Thursday 26 October 2023\, 1pm – 2 pm\nGallerie d’Italia – Torino\, Arena\nPiazza San Carlo 156\, Turin \nAfter the success of the 2022-2023 edition\, Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\, a new program of talks curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea at Gallerie d’Italia – Torino will return from October 26\, 2023.     Lunch Talks @ GDI Torino. Parlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics offers an opportunity to approach contemporary art. With a special focus on photography\, its birth and evolution\, and the relationship that inextricably binds it to other art forms\, the themes that will be addressed during this edition of Lunch Talks are an opportunity to learn about the works of some of the most important contemporary artists\, delve into epoch-making exhibitions that have redefined the concept of art\, and explore the thematic nodes that animate contemporary cultural debate. The talks are held by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev\, Director of Castello di Rivoli\, Marcella Beccaria\, Deputy Director\, Chief Curator and Curator of the Collections\, and Marianna Vecellio\, Curator\, who will accompany the public on a fascinating journey into the art of our days\, sharing their direct experiences and their continuous research work. Lunch Talks propose a new form of “lunch break”. The meetings will take place in the spaces of the Arena of the Gallerie d’Italia in Turin\, in a relaxed and informal setting. Participants will receive a lunch box curated by Costardi Bros and can end the experience with a visit to the exhibitions set up in the spaces of Gallerie d’Italia in Turin. The program is curated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino. \nLunch Talks @ GDI – Torino\n \nParlare d’Arte. Great artists\, great shows\, great topics\n\nCurated by Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea in collaboration with Gallerie d’Italia – Torino \n14 DECEMBER 2023 (1-2 pm) \nMarcella Beccaria\, Light in art\n\nFrom Caravaggio onward\, a journey to discover light in the history of art\, not forgetting the birth of photography as an original form of “light writing”. \nReservation required: torino@gallerieditalia.com or toll-free number 800 167 619 The activity costs € 22 and includes a lunch box by Costardi Bros and the entrance ticket to the museum.  \nIn collaboration with \n \nLunch box by
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/lunch-talks-december-14-2023/
CATEGORIES:conferenza,CRRI,Dipartimento Curatoriale
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231215T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231215T200000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231205T213020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T143323Z
UID:137213-1702666800-1702670400@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Nova Express
DESCRIPTION:Gianluigi Ricuperati presents the latest issue of the Nova Express magazine at the Bookshop of Castello di Rivoli.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/nova-express/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231215T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231215T210000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231205T213503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T143150Z
UID:137219-1702670400-1702674000@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Paint it Black. Murmur + Michele Ferrari
DESCRIPTION:Murmur + Michele Ferrari (Villa Lontana Records) \nPoetry on sound\nTexts by Luce Cacciaguerra and Greta Sugar\nSound by Michele Ferrari (VLR @villalontana)\nFriday\, December 15\, 2023 at Castello di Rivoli\, from 8pm to 9pm \nMurmur is a poetry collective founded in 2022 in Milan by Maria Luce Cacciaguerra (Palermo 1997) and Greta Sugar (Milan 1998) with the idea of reviving poetic art through encounters. Murmur gathers the words and the sound and visual research of artists\, thinkers\, and anyone who is passionate about poetry. It is an invitation to restart by the sharing of texts fostering a space for dialogue\, confrontation and a work on words. \nMichele Ferrari (1986) is a visual artist and musician. From 2020 he co-runs Villa Lontana Records\, an experimental and independent record label based in Rome\, which focuses on the production of new sounds\, from electroacoustic to sonorous poetry and from electro-magnetism to field-recordings.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/paint-it-black-murmu-ferrari/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231218T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251228T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20231218T084748Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T143035Z
UID:137854-1702886400-1766944800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Merenda Reale 2025
DESCRIPTION:Our contemporary Museum café\, decorated with the wall painting designed by the Swiss artist Claudia Comte “Slurp\, Boing\, Puff”\, also offers\, upon reservation\, the Merenda Reale\, a delicious moment\, where hot chocolate is prepared as in the 18th century accompanied by bagnati\, biscuits\, of the Piedmontese tradition. \nAnd you can also give it as a gift! Ask us how! \nInfo and reservations required at our Museum café on 011-9565273 \n  \nPhoto Le Strade di Torino
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/merenda-reale-2023/
CATEGORIES:food
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20231218T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20241231T180000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20230130T090257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230130T091436Z
UID:128122-1702897200-1735668000@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Guided tours of the Collections and temporary exhibitions at the weekend by the Education Department
DESCRIPTION:On Saturdays and Sundays\, Artenaute of the Castello di Rivoli Education Department accompany visitors on their discovery of the exhibition Olafur Eliasson: Trembling Horizons and the works part of the Permanent Collection of the Museum and the Cerruti Collection.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/guided-tours-of-the-collections-and-temporary-exhibitions-at-the-weekend-by-the-education-department/
CATEGORIES:visita guidata
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240117T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240117T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20240117T084038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240117T085712Z
UID:138220-1705485600-1705510800@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Today the Manica Lunga is closed for extraordinary maintenance. We will reopen as soon as possible.
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/today-the-manica-lunga-is-closed-for-extraordinary-maintenance-we-will-reopen-as-soon-as-possible/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240203
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240325
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20240125T100834Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T142753Z
UID:138359-1706918400-1711324799@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Vibrant Natures. On Decay and Rebirth
DESCRIPTION:Vibrant Natures. On Decay and Rebirth is a project developed by Almanac Inn\, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea and Orti Generali\, curated by Guido Santandrea and Marianna Vecellio\, in which the notion of decomposition\, hybridization and toxicity meets that of rebirth. \nStarting with the investigation of residual places and the transformation of matter\, the project investigates how processes of decay can represent opportunities for change\, metamorphosis and nurture\, in which new forms of coexistence\, alliance and stratification help to reimagine the existing and possible futures. \nIn the multiplicity of matter\, bodies permeate\, aggregate\, and participate in a collective dimension capable of subverting the individual condition of existence and transcending the human-non-human binomial. At every moment\, the form changes in a process of cyclical and perpetual reconfiguration to acquire a vital and mutable character\, capable of liberating and redefining the bodies. \nIn an approach that places transdisciplinarity\, ecology\, and intersectionality at its center\, the three partners will develop a program that\, from February 3nd to March 24th\, culminates in the week of the spring equinox\, a symbol of harmony and a condition for transformative benefit. \nVibrant Natures consists of workshops\, performances\, talks\, readings\, walks\, and installations to bring together nature and history\, environmental studies and artistic languages\, mysticism and poetry\, inviting international artists and intellectuals to Turin and engaging them in a dialogue with its territory. Among the participants: Soukaina Abrour\, Lucilla Barchetta\, Paolo Bosca\, Benni Bosetto\, Antonia Brown\, Filippo De Pieri\, Ethereal Society of Poetry\, Simone Frangi\, Matthew Gandy\, Allison Grimaldi Donahue\, Debora Incorvaia\, Huw Lemmey\, Michele Lonati\, Tabita Rezaire\, Viviana Sorrentino\, Noura Tafeche. \nThe program will unfold across the different venues of the partners involved: Almanac Inn\, the exhibition and research space dedicated to showcasing and supporting the practices of young emerging artists; Castello di Rivoli\, the first Italian museum dedicated to contemporary art; and Orti Generali\, the urban agricultural spaces established in a residual area on the banks of the Sangone stream in Mirafiori Sud\, strongly characterized by the social and environmental impact of the FIAT industrial plants that\, in the sixties\, led to a tenfold increase in the neighborhood’s population. \nVibrant Natures is a project made possible by the support of Fondazione Compagnia di San Paolo\, Fondazione CRT\, and Regione Piemonte.\n \n\nUpcoming Program\nSaturday 3 February\, h. 17\nCastello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\nNatura Urbana: Ecological Constellation in Urban Space (MIT Press\, 2022)\, lecture by Matthew Gandy introduced by Filippo De Pieri\nIn collaboration with the Department of Architecture and Design\, Politecnico di Torino \n\nSunday 4 February\, h. 18\n\nAlmanac Inn\nNatura Urbana\, 2017\, screening of Matthew Gandy’s film and conversation between the author and Lucilla Barchetta\nIn collaboration with the Department of Architecture and Design\, Politecnico di Torino \n\nSunday 11 February\, h. 18:30\n\nAlmanac Inn\nPoetry reading group by Ethereal Society of Poetry \n\nSaturday 24 February\, h. 18\nAlmanac Inn\nالماء والشطابة حتى لقاع البحر Acqua e scopa fino in fondo al mare\nOpening of the exhibition by Soukaina Abrour (until 24 March)\nIn collaboration with Centrale Fies \n\nSunday 25 February\, h. 18:30\nAlmanac Inn\nPoetry reading group by Ethereal Society of Poetry and Allison Grimaldi Donahue \n\nSaturday 2 March\, h. 15\nAlmanac Inn\nMicro regali di strada\, workshop by Noura Tafeche in conjunction with Soukaina Abrour’s exhibition \n\nSaturday 9 March\, h. 18:30\nAlmanac Inn\nConversation between Simone Frangi and Soukaina Abrour \n\nSunday 10 March\, h. 15\nOrti Generali\nWalk with Michele Lonati \n\nSunday 17 March\, h. 11\nOrti Generali\nWalk and collection of medicinal herbs with Viviana Sorrentino\nand at h. 15\nWalk with Lucilla Barchetta \n\nThursday 21 March\, h. 18:30\nAlmanac Inn\nWriting workshop by Huw Lemmey \n\nSaturday 23 March\, h. 16\nCastello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\nJardin Bois de Rose\, 2022\, and Terre Rouge\, 2022\, screening of Tabita Rezaire’s videos\nTango!\, 2024\, performance by Benni Bosetto\nLingua Ignota (Timeo\, 2023) reading by Huw Lemmey\nMercury + Red + Matrilineal\, performative reading by Antonia Brown \n\nSunday 24 March\, h. 12\nOrti Generali\nBanchetto della Rinascita curated by Debora Incorvaia and Paolo Bosca with the involvement of the Orti Generali community\nPoetry reading curated by Ethereal Society of Poetry \n\nBiographies\nSoukaina Abrour (Morocco\, 1997)\, artist.\nRaised in Italy since 2000\, Abrour graduated at the Academy of Fine Arts in Venice. She lives and works between Milan and Venice. Her research investigates the construction of the self in the human and non-human multitudes\, past and future\, through fabulation and its materialization in new forms. In 2022 she participated with BJCEM in a residency for Procida Capital of Culture. In 2023 she won the Agitu Ideo Gudeta Fellowship\, conceived by Razzismo Brutta Storia\, BHMF and Centrale Fies\, the residency with MilanoMediterranea and participated in the Farout festival at BASE Milano. \n\nLucilla Barchetta (Italy\, 1988)\, writer and anthropologist.\nBarchetta is a non-binary anthropologist and PhD in Urban Studies. Their interests intersect the topics of environment\, multispecies health and technoscience. They are the author of the book La rivolta del verde. Natura e rovine a Torino (AgenziaX\, 2021)\, in which they delve into the hidden history of Turin’s riverside areas to reveal the intrinsic politicity of urban ecology. \n\nPaolo Bosca (Italy\, 1996) philosopher and researcher.\nBosca is a PhD candidate at the Universities of Gastronomic Sciences of Pollenzo and the University of Turin\, he collaborates with IUAV and Ca’ Foscari University in Venice and he is a member of the collective Spazio Vacante. He works on the theme of space\, combining philosophical research with field experience to investigate the relationships between agricultural or gastronomic practices and the perception\, ecology and use of territories. His most recent published texts include Synchysis. The path of fluid knowledge (Vesper) and Disertare la crescita (Il Tascabile). \n\nBenni Bosetto (Italy\, 1987)\, artist.\nBosetto studied at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan\, where she lives\, and at the Sandberg Instituut in Amsterdam. Her practice encompasses drawing\, performance\, sculpture and installation\, and investigates the body from an interspecies and gender perspective. She has recently deepened her study of ancient and contemporary healing rituals and the states of semiconsciousness characteristic of meditation and sleep. She has exhibited at MAMbo\, Bologna\, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo\, Guarene\, GAMEc\, Bergamo and Quadriennale di Roma. \n\nAntonia Brown (South Africa\, 1989)\, artist.\nBrown studied at the University of Witwatersrand\, Johannesburg\, and the Piet Zwart Institute\, Rotterdam\, before participating in residency programs at Fondazione Ratti\, Como\, Cité Internationale des Arts\, Paris\, and Morpho\, Antwerp. She is interested in the cultural history of plants in relation to concepts of healing\, fertility and toxicity. Today she investigates the influence of medieval humoral medicine and botany on current conceptions of the body\, linking it to a decolonial process of reimagining somatic relationships. She collaborates with Kate Briggs. \n\nFilippo De Pieri (Italy\, 1968) Professor and architectural historian\nFilippo De Pieri is Professor of History of Architecture at Politecnico di Torino. His research covers a plurality of geographical areas (Europe\, East Asia\, North America) and topics such as the history of early nineteenth-century planning\, the history of urban conservation in the twentieth century\, the history of collective living and the environmental history of architecture. Among his publications: Esplorazioni nella città dei ceti medi: Torino 1945-80 (LetteraVentidue\, 2015\, con G. Caramellino\, C. Renzoni\, M. Pace) and Tra simili. Storie incrociate dei quartieri italiani del secondo dopoguerra (Quodlibet\, 2022). \n\nEthereal Society of Poetry\nEthereal Society of Poetry (ESP) is a project conceived by Davide La Montagna and Deborah Martino\, born from the desire to raise awareness\, promote\, and make poetry accessible through group readings. ESP is conceived as a meeting platform in the form of presentations\, readings\, conversations\, or roundtables open to all\, to take place in a free and safe environment. \n\nSimone Frangi (Italy\, 1982)\, curator and researcher.\nFrangi works at the intersection of critical thinking\, curatorial research\, and education. He currently serves as professor of Theory of Contemporary Art at the École Supérieure d’Art et Design in Grenoble. He directs with Alessandro Castiglioni Live Works – Free School of Performance at Centrale Fies of Trento and A Natural Oasis?\, a Transnational Research Programme. In 2021 he became Senior Curator of MEDITERRANEA19 – School of Waters. In 2021 he also co-published with Lucrezia Cippitelli the anthology Colonialità e Culture Visuali in Italia (Mimesis\, 2021); with her since 2023 he has been curator in charge of contemporary art exhibitions at Kunst Meran Merano Arte. \n\nMatthew Gandy (England\, 1965) geographer and urbanist\nMatthew Gandy is Professor of Geography at the University of Cambridge and an award-winning documentary filmmaker. His articles have appeared in many leading journals including IJURR\, New Left Review\, and Society and Space. His books include Natura urbana: ecological constellations in urban space (MIT Press\, 2022)\, Moth (Reaktion\, 2016)\, The fabric of space: water\, modernity\, and the urban imagination (MIT Press\, 2014)\, and Concrete and clay: reworking nature in New York City (MIT Press\, 2002). He is currently working on zoonotic aspects to urban epidemiology as part of a wider conceptual framing for the multi-species city. \n\nAllison Grimaldi Donahue (USA\, 1984)\, writer and translator.\nGrimaldi Donahue explores modes in which language\, performance and text can move between individual and collective experience. She employs participatory writing methods to build improvised communities of writers and translators\, investigating the ways in which language is useful and useless\, meaningful and a receptacle. She is author of Body to Mineral (Publication Studio Vancouver\, 2016) and On Endings (Delere Press\, 2019) and translator of Blown Away by Vito M. Bonito (Fomite\, 2021) and Self-portrait by Carla Lonzi (Divided\, 2021). She has given recent performances at  Sonnenstube Lugano\, Short Theatre\, Rome\, MACRO\, Rome\, MAMbo\, Bologna.  \n\nDebora Incorvaia (France\, 1987)\, chef and artist.\nIncorvaia graduated at the École Nationale Supérieure d’Art de Bourges and is a member of the Académie Nationale de Cuisine. Incorvaia combines food\, art and ecology to create “edible works”\, culinary performances\, sculptures and installations. Her research explores ancestral cooking and fermentation techniques\, and cooking and ancient recipes. \n\nHuw Lemmey (England\, 1986)\, writer\, artist and critic.\nLemmey is the author of three novels\, Lingua Ignota (Timeo\, 2023)\, My Corbyn Chemsex Hell (Montez Press\, 2019) e Chubz: The Demonization of my Working Arse (Montez Press\, 2014). He writes about gender studies\, sexuality\, politics and mysticism and contributes to Frieze\, Guardian\, Flash Art\, Tribune\, TANK\, The Architectural Review\, Art Monthly\, New Humanist\, Rhizome and Vogue\, among others. Together with Ben Miller he hosts the podcast Bad Gays\, from which the book Bad Gays. Crudeli e spietati: una storia omosessuale (Il Saggiatore\, 2023). \n\nMichele Lonati (Italy\, 1975)\, professor and theorist.\nLonati is a professor at the University of Turin\, where he coordinates the research group in Grassland Ecology and Management. He conducts research on topics related to conservation of rare endangered species and habitats\, biodiversity management and conservation\, containment of invasive exotic species\, grassland management and phytosociology. He is a member of the Italian Botanical Society\, the Italian Society of Vegetation Sciences\, and the Working Group on Exotic Plant Species of the Piedmont Region. \n\nTabita Rezaire (France\, 1989)\, artist\, devotee\, yoga teacher\, doula and farmer.\nRezaire lives in Cayenne\, French Guiana\, where she founded Amakaba\, a center for the wisdom of earth\, body and sky. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Economics and a Master’s from Central Saint Martins\, London. Rezaire is a founding member of the artist group NTU\, part of the duo Malaxa and mother of SENEB House. Her practice focuses on the relationship between technology and spirituality and imagines network sciences (organic\, electronic and spiritual) as healing agents capable of evoking the art of connection. Rezaire’s work has been exhibited: Centre Pompidou\, Paris; Serpentine\, London; MoMa\, NY; New Museum\, NY; MASP\, Sao Paulo; Gropius Bau Berlin e Artspace\, Sydney. \n\nViviana Sorrentino (Italy\, 1980)\, naturalist.\nSorrentino is a PhD at the University of Natural Sciences in Turin\, Italy. Since 2009\, she began studying wild herbs in relation to their beneficial and healing properties\, experimenting with the practice of foraging and cooking\, using wild plants as nourishment and a responsible ethical approach to our relationship with nature.  \n\nNoura Tafeche (Tristan da Cunha\, 1979)\, artist\, independent researcher and onomaturge.\nGraduated in New Technologies for Art from the Brera Academy of Fine Arts with a focus on net.art and radical entertainment\, Tafeche continues her studies in Philosophy. Her artistic path is developed through laboratory methods and practices\, video and miniature drawing. Her areas of research delve into the study of phenomena related to online visual cultures\, the aestheticization of violence on digital platforms\, linguistic experimentation\, and the visual representation of speculative theories. \n\nAlmanac Inn\nAlmanac is a nonprofit space dedicated to showcasing the variety of forms and languages of contemporary art and interacting with the different ways in which it can become an integral part of the daily rhythms of life. Almanac aims to support artistic research and development\, to address the urgencies of the present\, focusing on solo exhibitions of emerging artists and a complementary program of educational and participatory projects. Almanac began its operation in 2013 with Almanac Projects in London. Then in 2014 Almanac Inn was founded in Turin. In 10 years of activity\, Almanac has produced more than 80 solo exhibitions and carried out numerous projects in collaboration with international art institutions such as CAC Brétigny\, GAMeC\, Bergamo\, Gasworks\, London\, Goldsmiths University\, London\, MAMbo\, Bologna\, Morpho\, Antwerp\, OGR\, Turin. \n\nCastello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\nLocated in an 18th-century Baroque castle designed by architect Filippo Juvarra\, the Castello di Rivoli was restored and opened to the public in 1984. With its renowned collection of contemporary art and its 7\,000 square meters of exhibition space\, the Museum is one of Europe’s leading institutions dedicated to exhibiting and collecting contemporary art in a constant dialogue with the artistic and architecture of the past. An indispensable center of artistic culture\, the Castello di Rivoli contributes to the dissemination\, enhancement and study of contemporary art through exhibitions\, research activities and production of catalogs\, as well as advanced educational programs. \n\nOrti Generali\nThe project was initiated in 2018 with the aim of implementing a social enterprise model in a city park in the suburban Mirafiori Sud neighborhood of Turin\, characterized by an industrial past. Seeking to return to the community a park abandoned for many years and marked by squatting and degradation\, over 250 families were allowed to engage in urban horticulture as an opportunity for social and cultural integration. The transformation process\, which has included cultural events\, educational activities with schools\, and pathways to social inclusion\, has contributed to a renewed sense of community and the development of ecological awareness. \n\nGuido Santandrea (Italy\, 1989)\, curator.\nSantandrea is the artistic director and co-founder of Almanac Projects (London) and Almanac Inn (Turin). Since 2013 he has worked on the curatorial frame and production of over 80 solo exhibitions of emerging artists among the two locations of Almanac. His curatorial practice focuses on facilitating the development of early career artists to respond to the urgencies of the present. He has written for magazines such as Mousse\, Arte e Critica\, Kaleidoscope\, This Is Tomorrow and has contributed to conferences and conversations with artists in institutions and galleries such as Freie Universität\, Berlin\, Fiorucci Art Trust\, London\, Pump House Gallery\, London\, Richard Saltoun Gallery\, London. \n\nMarianna Vecellio (Italy\, 1973)\, art historian and curator.\nVecellio is a curator at the Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, Rivoli – Turin. Her areas of inquiry privilege research pertaining to contemporary subjectivity in digital society\, ecological\, and out-of-chorus practices. A curator of national and international exhibitions and publications\, she has conceived and realized exhibitions and publications for Castello di Rivoli\, including Michael Rakowitz\, 2020\, Hito Steyerl\, 2019\, Anna Boghiguian\, 2017 – 2018\, and Ed Atkins\, 2017. She has also designed and curated transdisciplinary projects aimed at exploring new forms of coexistence and transformation of the living\, between ecology and the posthuman\, andlectured and taught at universities and institutions. \nThe project is realized by Almanac Inn\, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, and Orti Generali. \n \nVibrant Natures is realized with the support of Fondazione Compagnia di San Paolo\, Fondazione CRT and Regione Piemonte.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/vibrant-natures-on-decay-and-rebirth/
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240203T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20240203T170000
DTSTAMP:20260610T204342
CREATED:20240125T134905Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T142459Z
UID:138375-1706979600-1706979600@www.castellodirivoli.org
SUMMARY:Natura Urbana: Ecological Constellation in Urban Space
DESCRIPTION:Leading the contemporary debate on redefining nature in an open\, queer and decolonial sense\, geographer and urbanist Matthew Gandy\, professor of geography at the University of Cambridge\, presents his book Natura Urbana: Ecological Constellation in Urban Space (MIT Press\, 2022). \nStarting from a layered vision that combines queer ecology\, multispecies urbanism\, relational theory and critical landscape studies\, Gandy elaborates a notion of urban space understood as a place in transformation\, both natural and subjective\, for the individuals who participate in it. \nIn his presentation Gandy will outline a working typology for urban ecology that highlights four analytical vantage points: systems-based approaches that dominate both pedagogy and practice; longstanding observational paradigms that have recently permeated citizen science\, new nature writing\, and novel aspects of environmental art; urban political ecology perspectives that explore the structural dimensions to the production of space; and an emerging interest in multispecies urbanism\, with links to critical animal studies\, multispecies ethnographies\, and more-than-human geographies. \nNatura Urbana: Ecological Constellation in Urban Space is the first event of Vibrant Natures. On Decay and Rebirth. Introduced by Filippo De Pieri\, Professor of Architectural History at the Department of Architecture and Design\, Politecnico di Torino. The event is presented in collaboration with the Department of Architecture and Design of Politecnico di Torino. The event will be in english. \nThe next event is on Sunday\, February 4th\, h.18 at Almanac Inn\, Via Reggio 13\, Turin\, featuring the screening of Matthew Gandy’s film Natura Urbana: The Brachen of Berlin\, 2017. This will be followed by a conversation between Gandy and Lucilla Barchetta\, writer and anthropologist\, author of the book La rivolta del verde. Natura e rovine a Torino (AgenziaX\, 2021). \n\nBIOGRAPHIES\nMatthew Gandy (England\, 1965)\, geographer and urbanist.\nMatthew Gandy is Professor of Geography at the University of Cambridge and an award-winning documentary filmmaker. His articles have appeared in many leading journals including IJURR\, New Left Review\, and Society and Space. His books include Natura urbana: ecological constellations in urban space (MIT Press\, 2022)\, Moth (Reaktion\, 2016)\, The fabric of space: water\, modernity\, and the urban imagination (MIT Press\, 2014)\, and Concrete and clay: reworking nature in New York City (MIT Press\, 2002). He is currently working on zoonotic aspects to urban epidemiology as part of a wider conceptual framing for the multi-species city. \nFilippo De Pieri (Italy\, 1968)\, professor and architectural historian.\nFilippo De Pieri is Professor of History of Architecture at Politecnico di Torino. His research covers a plurality of geographical areas (Europe\, East Asia\, North America) and topics such as the history of early nineteenth-century planning\, the history of urban conservation in the twentieth century\, the history of collective living and the environmental history of architecture. Among his publications: Esplorazioni nella città dei ceti medi: Torino 1945-80 (LetteraVentidue\, 2015\, con G. Caramellino\, C. Renzoni\, M. Pace) and Tra simili. Storie incrociate dei quartieri italiani del secondo dopoguerra (Quodlibet\, 2022). \nMore info on the full program \nThe project is realized by Almanac Inn\, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea\, and Orti Generali. \n \nVibrant Natures is realized with the support of Fondazione Compagnia di San Paolo\, Fondazione CRT and Regione Piemonte. \n \nThe event is presented in collaboration with the Department of Architecture and Design of Politecnico di Torino.
URL:https://www.castellodirivoli.org/en/evento/vibrant-natures-on-decay-and-rebirth-february-3-2024/
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