Camouflage I
Enrico Castellani
Isa Genzken
Imi Knoebel
May 30th, July 30th 2008
Curated by
Helmut Friedel
Giovanni Iovane
http://www.galleriagentili.it
The word “camouflage” comes of common use in Europe during WWI. It seems that its etymologic origin,
dated from the ’700, meant “to blow a gust of smoke at someone’s face in order to disorientate him.”
In England, it was Daily News that first used the term camouflage, on the 25th of May of 1917, to indicate
the action of hiding something from the enemy. The word was immediately transferred from the military uses
into daily life through the expression “eggs camouflaged in a scramble”, or often to ironically denounce a
bluff: “he is nothing but camouflage.”
In the artistic context, the wish or the need to become ‘smoky’ or invisible has a quite curious but at the same
time significant origin, in an expression used by Franz Marc in a letter he wrote from the battlefront to his
wife (quoted in “Transformations: Camouflage and Land Art” from Helmut Friedel). In this letter, the artist
expressed the need to build some “Kandinskys” in order to make invisible the trenches in which he and his
soldiers were hidden.
Exactly 70 years later, before starting his series of “Camouflages”, Andy Warhol asked the following to one
of his assistants: “What can I do that is abstract, but not really abstract?” In other words, it seems that
mimicry, in its most appropriate and fiercely assumption of camouflage, can offer a different point of view
from that of the artistic abstract models of the ’900 (and obviously contemporary), including those radical
experiences such as monochrome, located between a farewell and a suspension in the inner definition of
painting.
Camouflage is the title of a show that will be developed in two stages at the Gentili Gallery in Prato. Curated
by Helmut Friedel and Giovanni Iovane, the first exhibition will exhibit works by Enrico Castellani, Isa
Genzken and Imi Knoebel.
Enrico Castellani’s works have been rigorously expressing over decades (and without mimicry) this
suspended condition of painting as a “promise” of an autonomous and authentic space (further beyond the
minimalist tautologies).
On the other hand, Isa Genzken did a series of monochrome paintings (untitled “Basic Research”) and of
concrete sculptures that strongly represented an efficient answer to Minimalist and to its phenomenological
neutrality.
The works and installations of Imi Knoebel “destructure” decompose the idea of monochrome as a
presentation of “primary structures.”
galleria gentili
via del carmine 11
50100 prato
t: +39 0574 606986
f: +39 0574 443704
info@galleriagentili.it
http://www.galleriagentili.it