Urban Icons

 

Urban Icons

“我不忍心看到我家乡的天际线被广告形象、那些代表着女性的面孔和身体的入侵,同时愚蠢地将她们刻板化,并把她们简化为商品。”

The Wunderkammer set inside the Visionnaire Design Gallery in Piazza Cavour 3 in Milan hosts the "Urban Icons" personal exhibition by Paolo Leonardo from November 13th 2014 to January 24th 2015.

Paolo Leonardo is interested in portrayals of women in our consumer society, drawing on an immense archive of advertising images that show modern woman in all her stereotypes. The artist glimpses a potential meaning in certain posters and photographs, and a kind of magical power in some, that leads him to establish a dialogue between the image and his painting.

“I can’t bear to see the skyline of my hometown invaded by advertising images, by those faces and bodies that represent women, but at the same time dumb them down, stereotyping them and reducing them to commodities. One night in 1994, I tore down two big posters of women’s faces for the first time. After modifying them with painting in an Expressionist style, I illegally relocated them in street advertising displays. That’s how everything started, and that’s what I still do on the streets of Italy and abroad. When I choose an advertising image on the street, I realize that the photographic reproduction in it can have some potentials. Only through the isolation of this image from the others, I am able to develop a visual relationship in my studio, and the image redeems itself and gets a new own dignity through painting". Through the filter of paint, the photos become invested with my emotions”.

Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer
Urban Icons - Paolo Leonardo. Visionnaire Wunderkammer

Artist

Paolo Leonardo

Paolo Leonardo is interested in portrayals of women in our consumer society, drawing on an immense archive of advertising images that show modern woman in all her stereotypes. The artist glimpses a potential meaning in certain posters and photographs, and a kind of magical power in some, that leads him to establish a dialogue between the image and his painting. “I can’t bear to see the skyline of my hometown invaded by advertising images, by those faces and bodies that represent women, but at the same time dumb them down, stereotyping them and reducing them to commodities. One night in 1994, I tore down two big posters of women’s faces for the first time. After modifying them with painting in an Expressionist style, I illegally relocated them in street advertising displays. That’s how everything started, and that’s what I still do on the streets of Italy and abroad. When I choose an advertising image on the street, I realize that the photographic reproduction in it can have some potentials. Only through the isolation of this image from the others, I am able to develop a visual relationship in my studio, and the image redeems itself and gets a new own dignity through painting".
Paolo Leonardo, born in Turin in 1973 is an important artists in the new Italian art scene. Through a personal and autonomous painting, Leonardo has developed a topical research related to the relationship between art, photography and advertising.

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