Flashbacks is an exhibition curated by Alice Montanini that retraces the most important stages of BUILDING’s artistic research and promotion, on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of its birth.
This exhibition pays tribute to all the artists, curators and essayists who have contributed to shaping BUILDING’s core, presenting for the first time in an organic way a selection of works from the gallery’s permanent collection, accompanied by the catalogues and archive materials that document its curatorial practice over the last five years.
Central to Flashbacks‘ investigation is the moment of the exhibition, here conceived as a medium, mirroring the relationships and dynamics generated between the work, the artist and the gallery space, which flow into the more complex sphere of that system of critical and aesthetic categories that are at the basis of BUILDING’s curatorial approach and programming. An important focus of Flashbacks is also the catalogues published by BUILDING to accompany each exhibition. BUILDING’s strong focus on study and research, not only as a hub for the promotion of contemporary art but also as a publishing house, is evinced by the careful selection of essayists and texts included in the various publications.
The exhibition will provide an opportunity to think back to the highlights of BUILDING’s curatorial activity, while also looking ahead to the future of its programming. To look back at the recent past with gratitude to all those who have accompanied BUILDING to date, but also with a critical eye, in order to outline new coordinates with which to question the present and better orientate ourselves towards the future.
An open-door reinterpretation of its collection, through some representative works by the main artists promoted by the gallery, and of the curatorial and publishing activity carried out so far, presented in the spaces of BUILDINGBOX at irregular intervals and visible 24/7 from the window of via Monte di Pietà 23 in Milan.
Private Exposure
27 April - 28 August 2016
me Collectors Room Berlin / Olbricht Foundation
Private Exposure was a site aware exhibition in response to the unique me Collectors Room building, where the glass-fronted, open architecture of the space offers visitors multiple lines of sight and in the same moment puts them on display. Connecting across the two levels of the building and out onto the street, this exhibition emphasised and magnified the acts of watching and being watched. What ordinarily is a private encounter with a work of art is here exposed to the public gaze. Varying in medium and genre, the featured works evoke the power of the gaze and engage with their tangible presence, generating in the viewer an awareness of their physicality whilst occupying space in the gallery.
The exhibition was curated by Fabiola Flamini, Eilidh McCormick and Alice Montanini.
Featured artists: Marina Abramovic, Barry X Ball, Jeremy Blake, Don Brown, John De Andrea, Rineke Dijkstra, Charles Fréger, Andrè Gelpke, Paul Graham, Victor A. Guidalevitch, Nicky Hoberman, John Isaacs, Johannes Kahrs, Alicja Kwade, Leigh Ledare, Zoé Léonhard, Philip Lorca diCorcia,Tony Oursler, Evan Penny, Gerhard Richter, Pipilotti Rist, Zbigniew Rogalski, Gino Rubert, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Timm Ulrich, Erwin Wurn, Jian Zhang.
Dialogues of Space.
Heeseung Chung and Onejoon Che
December 15, 2015–February 6, 2016
Korean Cultural Center UK, London
Dialogues of Space combined a selection of photography works by Korean contemporary artist Onejoon Che and Heeseung Chung, offering examples of two artists' investigation into notions of physical and metaphorical space.
Onejoon Che’s precise and analytical photographs of architectural structures, abandoned urban sites and buildings provide a conceptual counterpoint to Heeseung Chung’s intimate and poetic interiors, opening up a discourse on human presence and its echoes through cityscapes. Sparking a discussion of the role of photography in the representation of society, Dialogues of Space highlights the skill and versatility in contemporary art from Korea.
Dialogues of Space has been curated by Alice Montanini, Anna Viani, Antonio Terzini and Emma Warburton and coordinated and mentored by curators of the Whitechapel Gallery.
Leonardo Meoni | Reveries in velvet and concrete
Leonardo Meoni | Reveries in velvet and concrete
December 2020
Zerial Art Project
Leonardo Meoni’s digital solo exhibition Reveries in velvet and concrete is the second appointment of the Online Exhibition Series project curated by Alice Montanini.
This exhibition gathers a selection of recent works belonging to the Velluti and the Concrete Tapestry series, both realized between 2019 and 2020.
Paolo Cervi Kervischer | in the dusk
October 2020
Zerial Art Project
Paolo Cervi Kervischer: in the Dusk is a virtual exhibition presented by Zerial Art Project and curated by Alice Montanini.
This event marks the first appointment of the Online Exhibition Series, a cycle of solo shows featuring various artists represented by the gallery.
All the exhibitions are accessible online via our website and social media platforms.
Private Exposure
December 2015
Strand Gallery, London
The group exhibition Urban Intimacy showcased the works of international artists Anna Capolupo, Noumeda Carbone, Yasmine Dainelli and Taida Jasarevic. Encompassing introspection and language, travel exploration and self discovery, the exhibited works explored the constant friction between an individual and their surroundings in defining identity and a sense of belonging.
The exhibition was presented by Cromoflix art community and curated by Alice Montanini and Tarik Berber.
PROTECHT
March 2015
Bank Space Gallery
Showing at The Bank Space Gallery PROTECHT was an exhibition co-curated by Matilde Biagi, Ines Costa, Fabiola Flamini, Alice Montanini and Antonio Terzini, in partnership with the Whitechapel Gallery and the CASS Faculty of Art, Architecture and Design.
The show brings together national and international artists who in very different ways present the screen as our ever-present shelter for facing the world. Throughout a wide range of mediums comprising photography, sculptures, video, and installations, the show investigates our relationship with the screen and the impact it has on our everyday life, questioning both the extent and the consequences of this reliance.
The exhibition comprised works by Pamela Breda, Daniela Brenna, Sophie Bullock, Jack Davis, Matthieu Delourme, Katrin Hanusch, Peter Hoiß, Alexander Isaenko, Jamie Jenkinson, Christine Lucy Latimer, Emily Lazerwitz, Ines Marques, Theo Tagholm, Sam Treadaway, Nara Walker, Roland Wegerer, Jack Williams and Dawn Woolley.