BSS
  19 Nov 2021, 20:34
Update : 19 Nov 2021, 21:00

'Classical' Rome hosts first contemporary art fair

   ROME, Nov 19, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - More than 150 galleries presented some 500

artists Friday at the first contemporary art fair in Rome, a city better
known for its ruins and works by masters long passed.

  "We wanted to fill a void," fair director Alessandro Nicosia told AFP,
indirectly acknowledging the absence for many years of a more avant-garde
artistic and cultural movement in the Eternal City.

  Veteran artists and young talent were represented at the four-day "Arte in
Nuvola" exhibition, offering a snapshot of the state of Italian modern art.

  Organisers hope the event, which runs until Sunday, will take place
annually and become a reference point for gallery owners, collectors and
museum directors.

  Paintings, sculptures, installations and videos filled 7,000 square metres
in the futuristic building at the Nuvola (Cloud) convention centre in
southern Rome.

  Works included Donato Piccolo's headless men, a digital painting by David
Maria Coltro of constantly changing landscapes, and a video installation by
young Bari artist Pamela Diamante.

  But there was also a foreign presence, from France's Cyril de Commarque to
the 17 artists of different backgrounds brought by official guest country
Israel.

  Commarque, who lives in Rome after years in London and Berlin, said the
fair represents a challenge for local artists.

  "For a person who grew up in Rome, it is more difficult to abandon
classical references, to express yourself in a more contemporary way," he
told AFP.

  His installation, "The Goddess of All Things", is made of recycled material
and shows a huge egg from which a pregnant woman emerges, in a modern
allegory of birth.

  Russian artist Iakovos Volkov made a map of the world with materials found
in rubbish dumps and on the street, including piles of clothes, empty
aerosols and stuffed animals.

  Another highlight was a huge black iron cube covered with lumps of coal,
conceived in the 1970s by Rome-based Greek artist Jannis Kounellis, who died
in 2017.