"Panorama"
GALERIA MARTA CERVERA congratulates Francesco Jodice for his solo show curated by Francesco Zanot
Francesco Jodice
GALERIA MARTA CERVERA congratulates Francesco Jodice for his solo show curated by Francesco Zanot
Centro Italiano per la fotografiaVia delle Rosine 18, 10123 Torino ![]() +39.011.0881150 e-mail: |
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GALERIA MARTA CERVERACalle Valencia 28 28012 Madrid España![]() tel. +34 913 105 036 e-mail: |
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11 May > 14 August 2016
![]() © Francesco Jodice, What We Want, Sao Paulo, R35, 2006 |
![]() © Francesco Jodice, Capri The Diefenbach Chronicles 003, 2013 |
The exhibition
Panorama is the first overview on the career of photographer and filmmaker Francesco Jodice (Napoli, 1967). The exhibit, curated by Francesco Zanot, offers the widest selection of Jodice’s works ever presented: more than twenty years of eclectic art, from an artist who does not shy away from using all available contemporary means for expression – alternating between photography, videos and installations – in his ongoing study of the contemporary geopolitical scenario and its social and urbanistic implications.
Panorama is about the process behind Francesco Jodice’s research and work: the whole exhibit is filled to the brim with the artist’s favourite topics and the thoughts and reasons behind his whole body of work. The setup draws the viewer in, showing the process behind the birth of all works and highlighting all that comes before – and shapes – the final product. Striking a fine balance between theory and practice, Jodice’s modus operandi is vital to all of the artist’s projects: they express the force and motivation behind the works, often found in the oeuvres themselves but sometimes only discernible from the first stages of production.
The Panorama on exhibit is therefore not only the geopolitical one: it also encompasses the whole of Jodice’s methods, through which his research becomes apparent. A whole slew of maps, books, newspaper clippings, backstage images, auditions, interviews, videos and much more, now shown on a 40-meter long, modular table in CAMERA’s hallway.
Out of Francesco Jodice’s whole oeuvre, six exemplary projects have been selected that span his whole career from the very beginning, highlighting both the artist’s consistency and his eclecticism. It’s a grand overview, a twenty year journey that holds, at its core, the themes of involvement, networking, anthropometry, storytelling and investigation.
Those are wide and complex topics, yet not out of the ordinary for an indefatigable traveller such as Jodice, whose works speak of a world both close and far away. The 150 metropolises depicted in What We Want – a photographic atlas on the evolution of the social landscape, started in 1996 and still ongoing – have more in common than they have differences. The same goes for the people he followed for his 1996-1997’s work The Secret Traces and the three case studies from Citytellers (2006, 2010), a series of films on emblematic geopolitical contexts.
Ritratti di classe (“Class pictures”, 2005-2009) is an in-depth exploration on the current state of culture and society in Italy, as seen through the lenses of end-year class photography. The Room (2009-2016) is a bold statement, a whole year in the life of this country narrated through newspaper pages, all but covered in black paint – the state of our contemporary age summarized by a few, symbolic words in a pitch-black room.
Solid Sea (2002), the result of a collaboration with the Multiplicity collective, originally presented in Documenta 11 and now proposed again in an ad hoc staging, turns the Mediterranean Sea into solid space – the only steady border in an age where national identities mean less and less.
Panorama is an exhibit on an artist whose oeuvre is paramount for the documentation and understanding of the changes in our world’s scenarios – both imaginary and real. As such, it re-establishes art to its former status: a means for social commitment.
Architect Roberto Murgia curates the expository project.
With grateful thanks to GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Torino, and Galleria Michela Rizzo, Venezia, for loaning the artworks.
The catalogue
The exhibit also offers a publication, edited by Mousse: a whole volume of images and taglines, meant to introduce the reader to the artist’s entire career and to spark a reflection on the catalogue as an editorial tool.
Panorama is the first overview on the career of photographer and filmmaker Francesco Jodice (Napoli, 1967). The exhibit, curated by Francesco Zanot, offers the widest selection of Jodice’s works ever presented: more than twenty years of eclectic art, from an artist who does not shy away from using all available contemporary means for expression – alternating between photography, videos and installations – in his ongoing study of the contemporary geopolitical scenario and its social and urbanistic implications.
Panorama is about the process behind Francesco Jodice’s research and work: the whole exhibit is filled to the brim with the artist’s favourite topics and the thoughts and reasons behind his whole body of work. The setup draws the viewer in, showing the process behind the birth of all works and highlighting all that comes before – and shapes – the final product. Striking a fine balance between theory and practice, Jodice’s modus operandi is vital to all of the artist’s projects: they express the force and motivation behind the works, often found in the oeuvres themselves but sometimes only discernible from the first stages of production.
The Panorama on exhibit is therefore not only the geopolitical one: it also encompasses the whole of Jodice’s methods, through which his research becomes apparent. A whole slew of maps, books, newspaper clippings, backstage images, auditions, interviews, videos and much more, now shown on a 40-meter long, modular table in CAMERA’s hallway.
Out of Francesco Jodice’s whole oeuvre, six exemplary projects have been selected that span his whole career from the very beginning, highlighting both the artist’s consistency and his eclecticism. It’s a grand overview, a twenty year journey that holds, at its core, the themes of involvement, networking, anthropometry, storytelling and investigation.
Those are wide and complex topics, yet not out of the ordinary for an indefatigable traveller such as Jodice, whose works speak of a world both close and far away. The 150 metropolises depicted in What We Want – a photographic atlas on the evolution of the social landscape, started in 1996 and still ongoing – have more in common than they have differences. The same goes for the people he followed for his 1996-1997’s work The Secret Traces and the three case studies from Citytellers (2006, 2010), a series of films on emblematic geopolitical contexts.
Ritratti di classe (“Class pictures”, 2005-2009) is an in-depth exploration on the current state of culture and society in Italy, as seen through the lenses of end-year class photography. The Room (2009-2016) is a bold statement, a whole year in the life of this country narrated through newspaper pages, all but covered in black paint – the state of our contemporary age summarized by a few, symbolic words in a pitch-black room.
Solid Sea (2002), the result of a collaboration with the Multiplicity collective, originally presented in Documenta 11 and now proposed again in an ad hoc staging, turns the Mediterranean Sea into solid space – the only steady border in an age where national identities mean less and less.
Panorama is an exhibit on an artist whose oeuvre is paramount for the documentation and understanding of the changes in our world’s scenarios – both imaginary and real. As such, it re-establishes art to its former status: a means for social commitment.
Architect Roberto Murgia curates the expository project.
With grateful thanks to GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Torino, and Galleria Michela Rizzo, Venezia, for loaning the artworks.
The catalogue
The exhibit also offers a publication, edited by Mousse: a whole volume of images and taglines, meant to introduce the reader to the artist’s entire career and to spark a reflection on the catalogue as an editorial tool.




Timetable:
Monday 11am–7pm
Tuesday closed
Wednesday 11am–7pm
Thursday 11am–9pm
Friday 11am–7pm
Saturday 11am–7pm
Sunday 11am–7pm
Last admission 30 minutes before closing time
Monday 11am–7pm
Tuesday closed
Wednesday 11am–7pm
Thursday 11am–9pm
Friday 11am–7pm
Saturday 11am–7pm
Sunday 11am–7pm
Last admission 30 minutes before closing time
mpefm
ITALY art press release
Tickets:
Admission fee €10
Reduced €6 for visitors up to 26, over 65 years old and owners of Abbonamento Musei Torino Piemonte Ticket holders: Museo Nazionale del Cinema, MAO, Palazzo Madama, Borgo Medievale, GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna, Touring Club Italiano, Forte di Bard, MEF – Museo ettore Fico, Amici della Fondazione per l’Architettura, Ordine degli Architetti member, AIACE member, Enjoy member
Free admission for children up to 12 years old Last admission 30 minutes before closing time
Guided Tour on Saturday and Sunday at 5pm (no reservation)
Full ticket + guided tour €12
Reduced ticket + guided tour €8
Reservations for guided tours are required for groups of 10 people or more:This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Ticket + guided tour €10
Admission fee €10
Reduced €6 for visitors up to 26, over 65 years old and owners of Abbonamento Musei Torino Piemonte Ticket holders: Museo Nazionale del Cinema, MAO, Palazzo Madama, Borgo Medievale, GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna, Touring Club Italiano, Forte di Bard, MEF – Museo ettore Fico, Amici della Fondazione per l’Architettura, Ordine degli Architetti member, AIACE member, Enjoy member
Free admission for children up to 12 years old Last admission 30 minutes before closing time
Guided Tour on Saturday and Sunday at 5pm (no reservation)
Full ticket + guided tour €12
Reduced ticket + guided tour €8
Reservations for guided tours are required for groups of 10 people or more:
Ticket + guided tour €10
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