Friday, 6 April 2012

Alighiero Boetti- Game Plan

Two days running we have retrospectives from the Tate Modern, this time it is the turn of Alighiero Boetti. The show runs chronologically, which is pretty standard, but is a little uninventive in the grande scheme of things; however, the show starts with a look at his work with building materials used in ways they were not intended. The first room seems a little crowded like the hardware store feel which is a nice touch in an nice room that runs through his work in the 1960s.
The various rooms flow through to the next stage of his career sequentially, highlighting his major works of the time. I found that my favorite room was the first biro drawing room that I encountered called Mettere Al Mondo Il Mondo (Bringing the World into the World). These biro paintings contain commas marking various phrases etc, all of which "appear like islands or stars.", but the overall appearance is like a hand crafted quilt from afar. 
Despite the biro drawing being my favorite i was still a great fan of the rooms Tutto, a room of huge montages of pictures form various sources embroided together making no particular highlight of any image, creating a unity, and the other was The Kingdom of Papers, which was work in a similar vein but this time there was a larger emphasis on tracing and collage. In all the show was logically curated flowing nicely from room to room, and due to the Hirst and Kusama exhibitions also being on this one slips under the radar a little.
In Short:- 4/5 A great show in terms of work on display, but also due to the quiet easy atmosphere due to the Tate's other shows.

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