Mario Merz

 

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Mario Merz, one of Italy’s leading contemporary artists, is mainly a self-taught artist. In the mid-sixties his experimentation led him to reject paint on canvas, and he explored non-traditional methods such as the use of ready-made objects, piercing the canvas with neon tubing, and using objects such as bottles, umbrellas, and raincoats. In 1967 he embarked on an association with several artists in what became a loosely defined art movement labeled Arte Povera that was marked by an anti-elitist aesthetic, incorporating humble materials drawn from everyday life and the organic world in protest of the dehumanizing aspects of industrialization and consumer capitalism. The work has had a profound effect on the art of today.

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Mario Merz, one of Italy’s leading contemporary artists, is mainly a self-taught artist. He was born in Milan in 1925, and attended medical school in Turin. During World War II, he was arrested for handing out anti-Fascist leaflets, and it was in prison that he started to paint. Merz devoted himself to painting after that.

Merz' first one-man exhibition was held in 1954 at the Galleria La Bussola in Turin. He worked in the then dominant style of Art informel. Analyzing certain natural phenomena such as the leaves of plants, he aimed to expose their essential structure with so-called "Fibonacci Numbers." In the mid-sixties his experimentation led him to reject paint on canvas, and he explored non-traditional methods such as the use of ready-made objects, piercing the canvas with neon tubing, and using objects such as bottles, umbrellas, and raincoats. In 1967 he embarked on an association with several artists, which became a loosely defined art movement labeled Arte Povera. This movement denoted a complete openness towards materials and processes, and was marked by an anti-elitist aesthetic, incorporating humble materials drawn from everyday life and the organic world in protest of the dehumanizing aspects of industrialization and consumer capitalism.

In 1968 Merz adopted one of his signature motifs, the igloo, as an architectonic primitive prototype. It was constructed with a metal skeleton and covered with fragments of clay, or wax, mud, glass, burlap or bundles of branches and, often, political or literary phrases in neon tubing. By the time of his first solo exhibition in the United States, at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, in 1972, he had also added stacked newspapers, archetypical animals, and motorcycles to his iconography. He often incorporates materials indigenous to the specific environment of his exhibitions, and adjusts the scale of the work to the site.

 

Merz had a retrospective exhibition organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in 1989. His works were also included in a recent exhibition, "Zero to Infinity: Arte Povera 1962-1972," organized in 2002 by the Walker Art Center and the Tate Modern, and held as well at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.

 

He passed away on November 9, 2003,  Milan

 

Biography

  1925  Born in Milan, Italy
Moved to Turin
  1945 Arrested for anti-fascist fight and started painting in prison
  1954 First one man exhibition at the Galleria La Bussola in Turin
  1960s Scribed as one of the main figures of "Arte Povera"
  1968 First interpretation of space with the igloo
  1972 Exhibition in Minneapolis, U.S.A.
  1975 Exhibition at Kunsthalle in Basel, Germany
  1988 Exhibition at the Anthony d'Offray Gallery in London
Exhibition in Nagoya, Japan
  1989 Exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum in New York
  2003 Awarded the Praemium Imperiale Prize for Sculpture, Japan Art Association, Tokyo
Died November 9, Milan