
The gallery Studio Gariboldi is pleased to present the exhibition Limiti di equilibrio, featuring a selection of twelve important artworks. At first glance they might seem different being combined together. Therefore, we invite the collectors to discover what brings them together and why.
Some of the exhibited artworks are founded on the relation between visible and invisible, others reveal the borderline skin that demarcates the limits of inside and outside. Equilibria of naturalistic/organic origin or mathematical/geometrical combinations create an expressive stage that holds the moment in which the form culminates in beauty.
Among the artists exhibited, Belgian Walter Leblanc, with one of his first twists executed in 1960; Alexander Calder, with a standing mobile, synthesis of his constant attention towards the importance of balance; the Japanese artist Nobuo Sekine, with his artwork #8, a rare piece on the Art market, conceived and executed at the beginning of the ’70s. "In other words, how can we define the external field of a word or in which the word is located?” That is the thought in direct reference to the three exhibited works of Giovanni Anselmo, Leone d’Oro at the 1990 Venice Biennale and a leading figure of the Arte Povera movement.
Together with them, Sérgio de Camargo, one of the most important Spanish artists, awarded with a gold medal at the 1960 São Paulo Biennale and presented at Venice Biennale and Documenta in Kassel of those years. Also on display is one of the first sculptures by Agostino Bonalumi, dated 1967 and published in the catalogue curated by Gillo Dorfles in the 1973.
The exhibition also includes the works by Gianni Colombo, César, François Morellet, Giuseppe Penone, Angelo Savelli and Jesús-Rafael Soto, artists who worked in different ways in order to achieve harmonious and physical balance.
| Hours | From Monday to Friday 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM, 2:00 PM - 6:00 PM |
| Venue | Studio Gariboldi |
| Type | Art Exhibition |
| Duration | 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM |
| City | Milan |
About
Studio Gariboldi
The gallery Enrico Gariboldi Arte Contemporanea, established in Largo Richini in Milan in 1981, was taken over after ten years by Giovanni Gariboldi, who transformed it in Studio Gariboldi inside of a small space in Corso Monforte 23. Studio Gariboldi started its exhibition activity exploring the Informal Art and movements like Nuclear Art, Spatialism and Existential Realism. The constant work of the gallery, recognized and appreciated by art critics and collectors, led to the enlargement of the exposition spaces, always within the prestigious location of Palazzo Cicogna. The gallery deepened the research on the International and European artists who were crucial and enlightening to the cutting-edge research of the Post-War period – from Lo Savio to Soto, from Leblanc to Gianni Colombo. For Studio Gariboldi the concept of “Making Art” has always coincided with the idea of giving light to the artworks and artists. Therefore, the symbolic and real importance of having exhibition spaces that would be able to better interpret the personal dynamic of the gallery was always essential. Consequently, the idea became a real need to find a new location, where the natural light and the post-industrial atmosphere could highlight the essence of the Artist on display. In 2014 a new space was inaugurated in Via Ventura 5, with an exhibition dedicated to Salvatore Scarpitta. Light and space became the perfect setting for the next shows, like Antonio Calderara, Mary Bauermeister, Nobuya Abe, Mirko Basaldella, Ray Parker.


















