16

You don't have to believe me

Date
21.04.2017 | 27.05.2017
Galleria
London
File
OTHER

Massimo De Carlo is pleased to present You don’t have to believe me by Paola Pivi. In this new exhibition, the second with our London gallery, Paola Pivi is presenting new and various kinds of works, playing with the viewer’s perception of alien and familiar, fake and factual.

The Italian artist Paola Pivi is know for her whimsical creations, that encompass different mediums, varying from large-scale installations to photography, sculpture and performance. This exhibition offers an insight into the artist mesmerizing use of varied media, and her ability to translate enticing matters into a light-hearted vocabulary of art.

The gallery window stops onlookers by showcasing Bad idea a sculpture of a polar bear, covered in white feathers, smashed flat against the glass: it is not clear if the polar bear is running away from something terrifying or if it is falling as a consequence of an audacious dance move. Bad idea was commissioned by the historical department store La Rinascente Duomo in Milan and shown in their windows during Milan Design week in 2017. Bad idea is part of an iconic body of work composed by colorful polar bears that are inspired by the artists’ time in Alaska, where Paola Pivi has been based for years.

The ground floor is inhabited by a multitude of kinetic works made of constantly rotating bicycle wheels, adorned with birds’ feathers. The titles of the works, such as It makes you wanna have a tattoo and People tell me I look like a jelly fish are as extravagant as the experience of the room itself. The wheels were first exhibited in 2016 at Paola Pivi’s retrospective Ma’am, curated by Justine Ludwig, at Dallas Contemporary art center. Quoting the artist: “You have the wheel, you have time, you have the animal, and when I look at them installed, it's almost like when you rewind a movie. It has that effect. It stops the perception of time for a second. They are trippy. Also, I feel like they tickle your brain.”

The basement hosts a new impressive installation that inspired the title of the show You don’t have to believe me. The installation is an enclosed room where the walls are covered by 52 large format screens and a sound system. The screens display circa 40,000 real images, one on each screen for 3 seconds, while the sound systems plays a human voice that continuously dictates lies. The artist conceived this work in 2013, as a result of having started a lawsuit (together with her husband the composer Karma Culture Brothers) in India against the Tibetan Children’s Village concerning the adoption of their son. Paola Pivi and Karma found themselves in a confusing situation, where lies were used as a tool of aggression against them. In 2017, the couple won all the court cases in India, moved away from India with their son. The artist is now able to display this engulfing work, which explores the concept of truth versus deceptions, facts against the lies of humans. This installation will only be on display until the 6th of May.

The first floor displays a new series of five drawings, large format, scanned and printed on PVC foil: one entirely drawn by the artist, three drawn by Jake Braff on a concept by Paola Pivi, and one drawn by Jake Braff on a concept by Paola Pivi and subsequently painted by Paola Pivi and containing collages by the artist’s son Tenzin Tsering. These drawings are biographical and refer to the four years that the artist spent living in India while fighting together with her husband for the adoption of their son Tenzin Tsering.

Paola pivi ph lady tarin 2
Paola Pivi

Nata in Italia nel 1971, la pratica artistica di Paola Pivi è varia ed enigmatica.


Per Pivi, l'arte è un'espressione della realtà liberata al suo massimo potenziale, che trasmette le emozioni più profonde attraverso materiali diversi. La sua arte presenta spesso oggetti riconoscibili come aeroplani, orsi polari e perle. Tuttavia, Pivi modifica questi oggetti in modo inaspettato, incoraggiando il suo pubblico a riconsiderare le proprie nozioni preconcette su ciò che rappresentano. Attraverso questo approccio, crea una forma unica di stravaganza utopica, esplorando continuamente nuove forme espressive e spingendo i confini della creazione artistica.


Una delle serie più accattivanti di Pivi sono le sue opere d'arte Pearls. Accumulo di linee di perle, questi dipinti declinano una sfumatura di colori che vanno dall'avorio al nero le cui declinazioni di tinte celebrano i vari colori della pelle. Per realizzarle Pivi si è appropriato del risultato del “lavoro” di una moltitudine di ostriche. Ha anche colto la somiglianza tra il lavoro del pittore su una tela e l'azione di un'ostrica che deposita strato dopo strato di madreperla sulla perla.


L'arte di Pivi è una dichiarazione sull'esperienza umana, esplorando i confini tra realtà e immaginazione, ordinario e straordinario