Dates
29.03.2022 | 29.07.2022
Gallery
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PRESS RELEASE

MASSIMODECARLO is proud to present Maurizio Cattelan’s YOU on March 28.

YOU is a brand new project that reflects upon fundamental human instincts: love, friendship, affection, power, loss and defeat. This new work of art appears as a revelation and opens the door to an unexpected space, used here for the first time, within the meandering rooms of the gallery’s Casa Corbellini-Wassermann.

YOU is a hallucination, a simultaneous image of control and failure. A generous welcoming gesture or a sad and inevitable farewell, YOU explores the role of the individual in the collective realm: an admission of surrender, or perhaps an affirmation of kindness. This new intervention by Maurizio Cattelan affirms the death of great powers, while infusing a new energy in the strength of the individual. Despite trying to create a distance between the work and the viewer, Maurizio Cattelan’s YOU is certainly all about us.

The Artist

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Maurizio Cattelan

Maurizio Cattelan was born in 1960 in Padua, Italy. He lives and works in New York, USA.


As a self-taught artist, Cattelan transitioned from his career as a furniture maker to pursue art in 1989. His early works often critique the personalities and conventions of the art world, establishing him as a conceptual “enfant terrible”. Cattelan rose to international prominence in New York with his controversial piece La Nona Ora (The Ninth Hour) in 1999, featuring a wax statue of Pope John Paul II struck by a meteorite, initially showcased at Kunsthalle Basel.


Renowned for his bold and often provocative approach, Cattelan is among the most celebrated and contentious figures in contemporary art. His playful manipulation of materials, objects, and actions generates semantic shifts, challenging both artistic norms and institutional boundaries. By placing his creations in unconventional contexts, Cattelan incites commentary and engagement from viewers.


Cattelan’s work is in the permanent collections of Fondation Pinault, Paris; Fonds National d’Art Contemporain, Puteaux; F.R.A.C., Languedoc-Roussillon and Nord-Pas de Calais; Gilles Fuchs Collection, Paris; The Israel Museum, Jerusalem; The Dakis Joannou Collection, Athens; Castello di Rivoli, Museo di Arte Contemporanea, Turin; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin; Jumex Collection, Mexico City; Migros Museum, Zurich; Elaine Dannheisser Collection, New York; Guggenheim Museum, New York; Rubell Family Collection, Miami and Seattle Museum of Contemporary Art, Seattle.