A curation by Flavio Scaloni, Gallery Manager at Galerie Lo Scalo - The Circus is an enduring artistic theme because it embodies a fascinating paradox: a dazzling spectacle of joy, danger, and artifice that masks deep human vulnerability, transience, and isolation. It is rich in symbolism: the clown signifies the tragicomic nature of life, the acrobat represents precarious balance, and the tent is a temporary, self-contained world. Psychologically, it reflects on the tension between the performed self and the authentic self. Historically, it found major expression with Toulouse-Lautrec and Picasso. Post-1950, artists continued to explore its dark allure. Marc Chagall frequently revisited the circus as a source of poetic fantasy, notably in his oil painting The Circus (1967). Referencing the sensationalism of the American institution, a notable contemporary work is Red Grooms' print/sculpture The Train of Life (Homage to PT Barnum) (1995), a vibrant tableau channeling the chaotic energy and sideshow spirit of Barnum's entertainment. The world-famous photographer Diane Arbus captured the unsettling dignity of performers in works like Albino Sword Swallower at a carnival, Md. (1970). This collection celebrates the circus as a complex modern metaphor for performance, illusion, and the human condition.
21 작품
이 내용이 마음에 드셨나요?
다음 컬렉션에 대한 정보를 고객님의 메일로 받아보세요!