Price Database
13 December 2024
Artists
Auctions
Artnet Auctions
Global Auction Houses
Galleries
Events
News
Price Database
Use the Artnet Price Database
Market Alerts
Artnet Analytics
Hidden
Buy
Browse Artists
Artnet Auctions
Browse Galleries
Global Auction Houses
Events & Exhibitions
Speak With a Specialist
Art Financing
How to Buy
Sell
Sell With Us
Become a Gallery Partner
Become an Auction Partner
Receive a Valuation
How to Sell
Search
Hidden
Ugo Mulas
Lucio Fontana XXXII Esposizione Internazionale Biennale d’Arte, Venezia, 1964
, 2023
50 x 60 cm. (19.7 x 23.6 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Ugo Mulas
Italian, 1928–1973
Lucio Fontana XXXII Esposizione Internazionale Biennale d’Arte, Venezia, 1964
,
2023
Ugo Mulas
Lucio Fontana XXXII Esposizione Internazionale Biennale d’Arte, Venezia, 1964
, 2023
50 x 60 cm. (19.7 x 23.6 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Silver salt print on selenium-stabilised baryta paper
Size
50 x 60 cm. (19.7 x 23.6 in.)
Price
Price on Request
Contact Gallery About This Work
Robilant+Voena
London / Milan / Paris + 1 other location
Artworks
Artists
Exhibitions
Contact Gallery
Sell a similar work with Artnet Auctions
About this Artwork
Exhibitions
06/21/2023–07/28/2023 Style. A Journey of Elegance from Anthony van Dyck to Kehinde Wiley
See more
Description
Ugo Mulas began his professional career as a photographer at the 1954 Venice Biennale and went on to photograph every Biennale until 1972. In the process, he befriended many of the twentieth century’s greatest artists, including Argentine-Italian painter and sculptor Lucio Fontana. Beginning in 1965, Mulas documented Fontana’s creative process in a series of photos showing the artist in his studio making his famous Tagli (Cuts), monochrome canvases precisely slashed with sharp blades and sometimes lined with black gauze to give them added depth.
While Fontana disliked the intimacy of being photographed at work, even by a friend, he is perfectly at ease in this seemingly spontaneous portrait taken at the Biennale. Fontana’s own association with the Biennale went back to 1930, and his comfortable familiarity is evident here. In his double-breasted, pinstriped suit and repp tie, he could pass for a well-heeled collector or art dealer, seemingly enthroned in an antique armchair. He wears the square-toed shoes that ‘complement perfectly the tapered lines of today’s trousers’, as Esquire magazine observed in April 1962. The confident, casually regal image proved to be prophetic: in 1966, Fontana would be awarded the prestigious exhibition’s Grand Prize for painting.
See more