Curated by Domingo Milella and Bacarelli Botticelli
Exhibition dates: 24 May – 6 July 2013
Brancolini Grimaldi announces a group exhibition of contemporary 
photography and works of art from the past.  Curated by photographer 
Domingo Milella and antiques specialists Riccardo Bacarelli and Bruno 
Botticelli, the show will place work by Dan Holdsworth, Clare Strand and
 Milella alongside antique sculpture, painting and artefacts, asking us 
to think outside of proscribed categories of art, to re-evaluate 
boundaries imposed by time and place to investigate what is 
contemporary.
The exhibition aims to bring art from different periods into a single
 span of time, into a continuous dialogue between now and then.  What 
relationship does a funeray monument of the Duchessa Bona di Savoia from
 the 15th century have to a photograph by Clare Strand? How does the 
monumental landscape photography of Dan Holdsworth relate to a piece of 
marble represnting the Crucifixtion from a Byzantine altar?  What does a
 painting from the front of a cabinet showing a wedding procession from 
1400s Perugia tell us about Domingo Milella's photograph of the tomb of 
King Midas in in Frigia?
When viewed through the long lens of the history of art, photography 
is still in its infancy.  It has only been in existence for around 150 
years and its use by artists as a means of expression is an even more 
recent development. It may seen that photography is a more contemporary 
medium than say painting or sculpture.  A photograph can be dated and 
fixed to a time period in a way which other media can escape. So how can
 it relate to artforms of the past and can it escape its contemporary 
nature?
The Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben has explored many of these 
ideas in his essay, What is the Contemporary?    Agamben describes being
 contemporary as "like being on time for an appointment one cannot but 
miss."   He goes on to say, "...the key to the modern is hidden in the 
immemorial and the prehistoric. Thus, the ancient world in its decline 
turns to the primordial so as to rediscover itself. The 
avant-garde...also pursues the primitive and the archaic....the entry 
point to the present necessarily takes the form of an archaeology; an 
archaeology that does not, however, regress to a historical past, but 
returns to the part within the present that we are absolutely incapable 
of living."
It is these ideas and concepts that the exhibition aims to explore 
through bringing contemporary photography into dialogue with an 
unexpected and thought-provoking range of art from antique and medieval 
times through to Renaissance and more recent periods.
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