Jump to content

Roberto Mangú

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 14:18, 20 October 2016 (Cat-a-lot: Copying from Category:20th-century Italian painters to Category:Italian male painters). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Roberto Mangú, also known as Roberto Mangu Quesada, and Roberto Mangou, is a contemporary artist, best known as a painter, who is also noted for his sculptures, installations, etchings and work as an architect.[1] Born in 1948 and raised in France, from Italian and Spanish descent, Mangú self-defines as European.

Biography

After a sculpture apprenticeship between 1963 and 1966 in the workshop of Mario Luisetti, Roberto Mangú studies at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts where he earnt a degree in architecture.[2]

During his first period, between 1981 and 1986, he works in Paris where he paints monumental paintings: Aldébaran, Bételgeuse, Dolce Vita, which are shown at the Georges Lavrov art gallery and published in the Artforum review in 1983.

Between 1987 and 1995, Roberto Mangú lives in Milan where he notably paints a series of standing men (Hommes Debout / Uomini in piedi) that are shown among other places by Philippe Daverio and at the Musée Cantini in Marseilles. The paintings Corpus Mundi, San Francisco, or Le Bateau Ivre (inspired by Rimbaud's poem) are representative of this Milanese period.

Even though he worked as an architect at this period — Roberto Mangú built a villa in Asnières near Paris which gathered him great international praise — he self defines as a painter.

In 1995, Roberto Mangú moved to Spain where he resided in Sevilla then in Madrid. This is where Mintak was born in the shadow of a picture on San Francesco (a theme formerly painted by Zurbaran). Mangú defines Mintak as born from what he calls "the Jaguar spirit", and which is for him the figure of life and permanence.

Between 2001 and 2004, Roberto Mangú moved to a place near Toulouse where his art is once more deeply renewed. Inspired by the landscapes and a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, he develops new series including houses drawn in recess or pathways that seem to burst the painting (Camino de Santiago, Via Natura, Les Blés à la Cadiscié)

After living in Bruxelles, Roberto Mangú returned to France where he worked on new colours: the orange of his Permanenza period (shown in the works: Le Visage d'une Eve, La Suite du Temps, Salvador) then the calmer blue of his Mar Adentro period. He also developed the series of the previous period (his Maisons become Codex, Mintak haunts new series like Ombra dell'Inizio or Rivage).

Roberto Mangú has also had dozens of personal exhibitions of his paintings in galleries in France, Spain, Belgium and Italy.[3]

Works

Formal Aspects

Because of the vitality shown in his earlier paintings notably "Virée sur la côte" or "Taureau mécanique", his extraordinary knowledge and skillful use of colours especially intense reds (cf Lola), his work is sometimes mistakenly cited as belonging to one of the following movements: neo-expressionism, or Transavantgarde. Some have also wrongly likened his work to that of the nouveaux fauves.

As Alessandra Troncana remarks in the Corriere della Serra[4] Mangú's work is far too original and personal to be so easily classified. Over time, he has shifted to darker colours and used a variety of techniques, working notably sometimes in negative: the object is drawn by taking off (rather than adding) colour through painting large surfaces in white on a coloured background (the "Pan y Vino" series). Later Mangú returned to colour, especially with the intense orange of his Permanenza period before coming back to calmer blues in his Mar Adentro period.

Themes

There are recurring themes in the work of Mangú. In Le Cœur émeraude de Roberto Mangú, Alain Santacreu sees in this the expression of "an ancestral pictorial tradition, primordial, rooted in the religiousity of origins." [5]

Philippe Daverio wrote: "tu per me rappresenti una Spagna pittorica che non ha nulla a che vedere con i libri di storia dell’arte e ancor meno con i musei di Madrid. Ciò che mi ha colpito, la prima volta che ho visto i tuoi quadri, è lo spirito feroce, ribelle e indomabile che li animava. Ciò che mi ha convinto della loro autenticità, era quanto essi corrispondessero al tuo aspetto medesimo. Tu non hai ricominciato a dipingere. Tu hai sempre dipinto. E persisti nel dipingere a modo tuo, con tanto vigore. La tua visione fisica e corporale, la tua visione metafisica, è come le tue radici lontane nelle vie di Parigi, quelle dei gitani".[6]

In the 1980-90s, these themes include standing men, monoliths, saints, which all seem to converge in his large masterpiece, a dark picture of a "Saint George" In the 2000-10s, according to Gwen Garnier-Duguy in Le Sens de l'Épopée,[7] three central themes run through Roberto Mangú's paintings: Mintak, seen as an Aleph by Santacreu, Permanenza and La Refloraison du Monde

Main individual exhibitions

  • 1983, Galerie Georges Lavrov, Paris
  • 1984, Galerie Catherine Macé, Cannes.
  • 1984, Galerie Georges Lavrov, Paris
  • 1985, Galerie Catherine Macé, Cannes
  • 1988, Galeria Ontiveros, Madrid
  • 1989, Galerie Catherine Macé, Cannes.
  • 1989, Galerie Ontiveros, Madrid
  • 1990, Galeria Ontiveros, Madrid
  • 1991, Galleria Philippe Daverio, Milan
  • 1992, Galleria Philippe Daverio, Milan
  • 1995, Galleria Philippe Daverio, Milan
  • 1998, "Saint Georges", Galerie Georges Fall, Paris
  • 2001, Palazzo delle Stelline, Centre Culturel Français, Milan
  • 2003, "Regard", Centro Mostre per l'Arte Contemporanea Venti Correnti, Milan
  • 2005, "Roberto Mangú", MUDIMAdrie (Fondazione Mudima), Anvers
  • 2006, "Fuego", Centro Mostre per l'Arte Contemporanea Venti Correnti, Milan
  • 2007, "Permanenza", Galleria L’Archimede, Roma
  • 2008, "Permanenza", Galerie La Trace, Paris
  • 2008, "Permanenza", Galerie Stella & Vega, Brest
  • 2011, "Itinérance I, « Autour d'un tableau » de Roberto Mangú", Stella & Vega Production, Galerie Janos, Paris[8]
  • 2012, "Mar Adentro", Museo di Santa Giulia, Brescia[9]

Main collective exhibitions

  • 1983, Galerie Georges Lavrov, Paris
  • 1983, Galerie Georges Lavrov, Saint – Tropez
  • 1984, Salon d'art contemporain de Montrouge, Paris
  • 1984, Art Basel 84, Bâle
  • 1984, International Contemporary Art Fair, Londres
  • 1985, Salon d'art contemporain de Montrouge, Paris.
  • 1985, Salon de Mai, Paris.
  • 1985, International Contemporary Art Fair, Londres
  • 1986, Galerie Catherine Macé, Cannes.
  • 1986, Galerie Georges Lavrov, Paris.
  • 1986, Art Jonction, Nice.
  • 1986, Galerie Ontiveros, Madrid
  • 1987, Masques d’artistes, La Malmaison, Cannes.
  • 1987, Maisons, examples choisis, Institut français d'architecture, Paris
  • 1989, Galerie Dacal, Madrid.
  • 1989, Galerie Catherine Macé, Cannes.
  • 1989, "Mangú, Pacea", Galeria Ontiveros, Madrid
  • 1990, "Le Paradis des Peintres", Musée de la Castre, Cannes
  • 1990, Galeria Ontiveros, Madrid.
  • 1990, Galleria Shubert, Milan
  • 1991, "Les Couleurs de l’Argent",[10] Musée de la Poste, Paris
  • 1992, "Arthur Rimbaud et les artistes du XXe siècle",[11] Musée Cantini, Marseille
  • 1993, Galleria Philippe Daverio, Milan
  • 1994, "Alternative", Galleria Philippe Daverio, Milan
  • 1994, "Il Corpo", Galleria Philippe Daverio, Milan
  • 1995, Coll.priv, Palazzo delle Stelline, Milan
  • 1995, "Art Tabac", sous la direction de Pierre Restany, Scuderie di Palazzo Ruspoli, Rome
  • 1996, Coll.priv, Palazzo delle Stelline, Milan
  • 1996, "Anni’90 a Milano", ISBN 8886116136, Sala Napoleonica, Accademia di Brera, Milan
  • 1998, "Accrochage", Galerie Georges Fall, Paris
  • 1999, "Babelia", MiArt (Galleria Philippe Daverio), Milan
  • 1999, Fiera d’arte contemporanea di Milan
  • 2001, Galerie Antoine Ranc, T.S.F. Paris
  • 2002, Linéart, foire d’art moderne & contemporain (Galerie Antoine Ranc), Ghent
  • 2004, "De leur temps : collections privées françaises", ADIAF, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Tourcoing
  • 2004, Art Paris, foire d’art moderne & contemporain (Centro Mostre per l'Arte Contemporanea Venti Correnti), Paris
  • 2005, Art Paris, foire d’art moderne & contemporain (Centro Mostre per l'Arte Contemporanea Venti Correnti), Paris
  • 2005, Centro Mostre per l'Arte Contemporanea Venti Correnti, Milan.
  • 2006, "Figures et Portraits", Stella & Vega Production, Brest
  • 2007, "Papiers d’artistes", Stella & Vega Production, Brest et Paris
  • 2007, Centro Mostre per l'Arte Contemporanea Venti Correnti, Milan
  • 2008, "Collection privée""", Stella Collection, Brest
  • 2010, "10 sérigraphies", Sérithèque,[12] Montpellier
  • 2011, '""10 Artistes, Galerie Janos", Paris[13] · [14]
  • 2012 "4 hispaniques en noir et blanc +une", Galerie Janos, Paris

Bibliography

  • Roberto Mangú has been the subject of academic work by researchers at La Sorbonne, including a Master's dissertation [15] and a PhD[16]
  • Gérard George Lemaire in "9 artistes à Milan aujourdh'hui"
  • Opus International N° 119 Paris mai juin 1990
  • Mangú. Le passager des étoiles, Jean-François Gautier and Dominique Stella, Mazzotta 1998. ISBN 88-202-1293-5
  • Roberto Mangú, Permanenza, Shin Factory, ASIN B00T02D8AS
  • Roberto Mangú: Regard, Dominique Stella, Milan : Mudima, 2002
  • Roberto Mangú : Mar adentro, Dominique Stella, Véronique Serrano, Milan : Grafiche Aurora, 2012. ISBN 88-979-1305-9
  • Roberto Mangù, Fuego, Milan : Venti Correnti, 2006
  • Nox, Gwen Garnier-Duguy and Néro, Editions Le Grand Souffle, Paris, 2006, ISBN 2-916492-24-0
  • "Les Enfants de Bonnard", Roberto Mangú in Bonnard et Le Cannet : dans la lumière de la Méditerranée, Véronique Serrano, Paris, Hazan 2011 ISBN 27-541-0561-1

References

  1. ^ http://%20http://www.seritheque.com/boutique/mangu-m-161.html
  2. ^ http://www.ledelarge.fr/3986_artiste_mangu__roberto
  3. ^ "Dictionnaire des arts plastiques modernes et contemporains", Jean-Pierre Delarge, Paris : Gründ, 2001, ISBN 2700030559
  4. ^ Ombre e metropoli È l'arte gitana di Roberto Mangú, "Corriere della Serra", 14 December 2012, page 11
  5. ^ "Du Religieux dans l'Art", Alain Santacreu (dir), pages 9 & 10 ISBN 2296569374
  6. ^ http://amicididaverio.blogspot.fr/search?q=mang%C3%B9
  7. ^ http://www.recoursaupoeme.fr/chroniques/mang%C3%BA-le-sens-de-l%C3%A9pop%C3%A9e/gwen-garnier-duguy
  8. ^ http://expo.galeriejanos.com/expositions/itinerance
  9. ^ http://www.undo.net/it/mostra/150405
  10. ^ Les Couleurs de l'Argent, Jean-Michel Ribettes et Martine Mairal. ISBN 2-905412-09-7.
  11. ^ "Arthur Rimbaud et les artistes du XXe siècle", Nicolas Cendo, Véronique Serrano, André Guyaux. Marseille : 1991.
  12. ^ http://www.seritheque.com/boutique/artistes.php?manufacturers_id=161
  13. ^ http://expo.galeriejanos.com/artistes/roberto-mangu
  14. ^ http://expo.galeriejanos.com/expositions/dix-artistes
  15. ^ Roberto Mangú : Portrait d'un peintre méditerranéen, Véronique Serrano, mémoire de maîtrise sous la direction de Fanette Roche, Université Paris-Panthéon Sorbonne, Paris : 1984
  16. ^ Roberto Mangú : Carnets : Mise en évidence d'une mécanique artistique et politique moderne, Véronique Serrano, thèse de doctorat engagée en 2000 sous la direction d'Eric Darragon