• About us
  • Magazine
  • Submissions
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Friday, May 23, 2025
No Result
View All Result
Ceramics Now
Subscribe now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • 2025 Ceramics Calendar
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
Ceramics Now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • 2025 Ceramics Calendar
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
No Result
View All Result
Ceramics Now
Home Archive

Bertozzi & Casoni: Regeneration / All Visual Arts, London

September 30, 2012
in Archive, Exhibitions
Bertozzi & Casoni: Regeneration / All Visual Arts, London

Bertozzi Casoni Regeneration exhibition, All Visual Arts, London

Bertozzi & Casoni: Regeneration / All Visual Arts, London
October 13 – November 10, 2012

Private view: October 12, 7-9 pm.

All Visual Arts are proud to present Regeneration, a unique installation from Italian artists Bertozzi & Casoni. The artists are acclaimed for their delicate depictions of a culture in decay, deftly rendered in fragile ceramic clay. Their latest work Regeneration queries the hierarchy of aesthetics, revealing the beauty in the neglected and discarded ephemera of our seamless culture. The pieces compel the viewer to confront the visceral decay of contemporary society, to expose the cracks between the artifice of the world we are presented with and to explore what lies within these fissures. With this imaginative approach to their practice, Bertozzi and Casoni align the traditional with the experimental, and allow us to construct our own narrative around their evocative scenes.

Bertozzi and Casoni manipulate the indistinction between the real and the simulacrum in their work, an obsession for detail which evokes the Decadent taste for imitation and crafted artifice as superior to the natural. In fabricating these visually and emotionally compelling still-lifes, the artists engage the viewer in deeper themes of impermanence and mortality. Through rendering the abject and overlooked in such exquisite detail, Bertozzi and Casoni signal the return of the repressed, the avoidance of our own mortality. In one piece in which the memento mori is explicitly rendered, an ox skull is dominated by a vivid monitor lizard, symbolic of both death and rebirth in its habitat across Asia and Australia. In the antonymously titled DisGRACE, vibrant blooms sprout from the polluted detritus of a decadent and avaricious society, a scene of nature triumphing over the excesses of hyper-capitalism.

Regeneration contemplates the possibility of change through rebirth, rediscovery and reappropriation, manipulating earth into elegant and fragile structures. In one piece, a cluster of butterflies flock to raise the severed head of a deer from an ornamental platter, recalling the Renaissance representations of John the Baptist or Holofernes. In a similar echo of classical scenes, and dominating the Regeneration is the serene image of a silverback gorilla resting in the Buddhist lotus position on a bed of discarded mattresses. A roe deer lies prone across its body, while wrens and goldcrests commune around the pair. The piece is an evocation of symbolic power, from the visceral confrontation of our Darwinian descendent dying out in front of our eyes, to the shift between the viewer and sculpture, object and subject as we find ourselves caught in the compassionate gaze of the animals. Our own mortality is inscribed in the tableaux where urban structures, religion and the animal world collide to reveal the grace in disgrace which Bertozzi and Casoni seek to capture.

It seems appropriate that the duo push their material to its limits and question the possibility of representation in their work at every turn. Their liberal accumulation and compilation of cultural references is evident in the playful amalgamation of objects in a work where a swordfish’s head juts from a guitar case; the shapes tessellating the natural with the cultural. Their curiosity and playful approach to objects creates a process of continual experimentation and discovery, freeing themselves from convention and the stereotypes of the ornamental and domestic associated with the ceramic medium, and producing unexpected moments of pathos and humour through their synthesis of past and present, nature and artifice. The artists subvert the established rules about the perception of applied arts through inverting the symbolic power of their traditional medium, exceeding the inherent conservativism of ceramics to sculpt fantastic and grotesque scenes that liberate both the artist and viewer’s imagination.

Inscribed in their material is the transience and fragility of life, etched into the familiar gloss of the ceramic clay. Their material significantly claims no preference for the objects it simulates, from the most delicate orchid to the decaying sod it stems from, the ceramic detail is precisely rendered without discrimination. This aesthetic redemption and regeneration typifies Bertozzi and Casoni’s work; by aligning objects outside of context and value systems, their imaginative, unbridled approach reveals the humour, depth and beauty latent in the interstices of a culture veiled by aesthetic superiority. Their work is a continuous cycle of discovery, awakening a curiosity within the viewer that fuels a return to innocence, a regeneration of Arcadia from the seeds of a crumbling empire.

Giampaolo Bertozzi and Stefano Dal Monte Casoni met while studying at the Ceramic Art College of Faenza, shortly after which they decided to work together in a collaborative artistic partnership. They work with various ceramic materials, using both tradition and experimentation in a continuous attempt to free themselves from conventionality and cultural stereotypes connected to ceramics and to the so-called ‘applied arts’.
 
The artistic research of this collaboration produces objects which link the past and the present along an axis; so that technique, objects, themes and clichés exist together on the same level with the same formal attention in a synthetic world made up of ironic naturalness. Bertozzi & Casoni live and work in Italy.

Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10-6pm.

CONTACT
Camilla Cole
ccole@allvisualarts.org
Tel. +44 (0)20 7843 0412

All Visual Arts
2 Omega Place
London N1 9DR
United Kingdom
www.allvisualarts.org

Above: Bertozzi & Casoni, Melanconia (Guitar case with Swordfish), 2012, Polychrome ceramic, 50 x 106 x 50.

More exhibitions »

Tags: All Visual ArtsArtBertozzi and CasoniBertozzi CasoniCeramic artistsCeramic exhibitionCeramicsContemporary artContemporary ceramicsExhibitionsLondonNews

Related Posts

Alive & Unfolding ceramics exhibition
Exhibitions

Alive & Unfolding contemporary ceramics exhibition opens this week at Le Delta, Namur

May 13, 2025
Yanagihara Mutsuo ceramics
Exhibitions

Breathing Vessels: Contemporary ceramics by Yanagihara Mutsuo at Dai Ichi Arts, New York

May 13, 2025
made in Jingdezhen
Exhibitions

made in Jingdezhen at Axel Obiger, Berlin

May 12, 2025
Katie Spragg at Ruup & Form
Exhibitions

Katie Spragg: The Fragmented Landscape at Ruup & Form, London

May 9, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *



Latest Artist Profiles

Alice Shields ceramic artist
Artists

Alice Shields

April 28, 2025
Yuriy Musatov ceramics
Artists

Yuriy Musatov

April 23, 2025
Philsoo Heo ceramics
Artists

Philsoo Heo

April 15, 2025
Hanna Miadzvedzeva ceramic artist
Artists

Hanna Miadzvedzeva

April 11, 2025

Latest Articles

Del Harrow and Yonatan Hopp ceramics
Articles

Sticks, Stickness, Stickiness

by Ceramics Now
May 23, 2025
Anne Laure Cano and Jim Gladwin
Interviews

Translate: L’Ofici Ceramista – Two artists, a defunct factory, a museum and an archive

by Ceramics Now
May 8, 2025
The Whole World In Our Hands
Articles

The Whole World In Our Hands at The Stephen Lawrence Gallery

by Ceramics Now
May 6, 2025
Tontouristen Kollectiv
Articles

Tontouristen Kollektiv: What can be found in the gap between the different clay narratives?

by Ceramics Now
April 28, 2025
Instagram Facebook LinkedIn
Ceramics Now

Ceramics Now is a leading independent art publication specialized in contemporary ceramics. Since 2010, we promote and document contemporary ceramic art and empower artists working with ceramics.

Pages

  • About us
  • Magazine
  • Submissions
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Subscribe to Ceramics Now Magazine

Join a vibrant community of over 21,000 readers and gain access to in-depth articles, essays, reviews, exclusive news, and critical reflections on contemporary ceramics.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY

© 2010-2025 Ceramics Now - Inspiring the next generation of ceramic artists.

  • Subscribe to Ceramics Now
  • News
  • Artist profiles
  • Articles
  • Exhibitions
  • Ceramic art
  • Interviews
  • Resources
    • Ceramics Now Weekly
    • Ceramics Calendar 2025
    • Ceramics job board
    • Pottery classes
  • About us
    • Ceramics Now Magazine
    • Submissions
    • Advertise with Ceramics Now
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result

© 2010-2025 Ceramics Now - Inspiring the next generation of ceramic artists.