Movements and Variations
April 7–June 3, 2018
MATA – Ex Manifattura Tabacchi
Via Manifattura Tabacchi, 83
Modena
Italy
Curated by Adam Budak, Diana Baldon
Fondazione Fotografia Modena is pleased to present a solo exhibition by internationally acclaimed Los Angeles-based artist Sharon Lockhart (b. Massachusetts, United States, 1964). Hosted in Fondazione Fotografia’s temporary exhibition venue MATA, a former tobacco factory located in Modena’s city centre, the show introduces three new, interconnected series of photographic and sculptural works, conceived especially for this venue and inspired by its workers’ social activism.
Throughout her career, Lockhart has immersed herself in communities to make works—including photographs, films and installations—that uniquely capture groups and individuals through studied, choreographed compositions. The points of departure for Lockhart’s new works stem from her ongoing interest in portraiture, representation, movement, labour and the power of women. Comprising casts of manzanita, buckeye, and black walnut sticks that Lockhart gathered in California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains, A Bundle and Five Variations (2018) is the artist’s first engagement with bronze sculpture. Lockhart previously featured similar sticks in her film Little Review (2017). In collaboration with Ravi GuneWardena from the Sogetsu School of Ikebana, these sculptures have been grouped into six distinct arrangements, five of which are derived from the larger bundle on view. Balancing form and weight, the sculptural iterations reflect both the natural and constructed relationships of the sticks. With a similar focus on structure and variation, for the photographs in Nine Sticks in Nine Movements (2018), Lockhart and the protagonist of the shots, Sichong Xie, worked together to generate a movement for each of the bronzes. Each position is devised with reference to a myriad of poses from social and art historical sources. Like a dance, the photographs—alongside the sculptural arrangements—capture the interplay between choreography and the physicality of the bronze sticks.
Drawing from exchanges between the artist, the curators and Fondazione Fotografia Modena, the exhibition also engages with the politically charged history of the site, a former tobacco factory that was, at times, staffed by an entirely female workforce. The show includes a selection of images from the archives of the well-known photo studio Botti e Pincelli, owned by the City of Modena and now managed by Fondazione Modena Arti Visive. Shot in 1963 and in 1968 but never published, these black-and-white photos depict demonstrations of farmers distributing potatoes to workers of both the tobacco factory and the nearby Corni Foundries, as well as dumping milk on the road, in an act of protest against the economic policies introduced by the Italian government to regulate agricultural tariffs. They parallel another form of self-determination and economic autonomy that Lockhart captured in her “independent business” photographs—Dirty Don’s Delicious Dogs, Moody Mart, and Handley’s Snack Shop (all 2008)—which will also be featured in the exhibition. Part of Lockhart’s larger Lunch Break project, these photographs depict makeshift stands used by the workers of a major American shipbuilding company. Although specifically prohibited by the factory’s management, the stands line the corridors of the workshops and provide food and beverages to other workers in an act of defiance against the mass-produced goods sold by the management at inflated prices.
Special thanks to Patrizia Cremonini (Archivio di Stato di Modena), Ravi GuneWardena, Alex Slade, Vidhi Todi, Tanita Enderes, Andrew Goeser (Lockhart Studio, Los Angeles), Caroline Luce (Gladstone Gallery, New York and Brussels), Dylan Lustrin (neugerriemschneider, Berlin), Tiziano Rossano Maineri, Giò Marconi, Esther Quiroga (Giò Marconi, Milan), MAST Collection, Bologna, Gunia Nowik and Sichong Xie.
Together with Galleria Civica di Modena and Museo della Figurina, Fondazione Fotografia Modena is part of Fondazione Modena Arti Visive, an institution directed by Diana Baldon and founded by the City of Modena and the private philanthropic foundation Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Modena.
Opening hours
Wednesdays–Fridays, 3–7pm
Saturdays and Sundays, 11am–7pm
Mondays and Tuesdays closed
Special opening days
May 1, 2018 , 3–7pm
May 19, 2018, 11am–midnight
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Irene Guzman
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