Product Details
Alighiero E Boetti: Mappa (One Work Series)

Alighiero E Boetti: Mappa (One Work Series)
By Pier Luigi Tazzi

Price: £9.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

23 new or used available from £6.22


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1032062 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-12-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 112 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
This is a study of Boetti's 1988 work "Map", a tapestry map of the pre-postcommunist world made of brightly colored, painstakingly woven national flags; illustrated with many color images.In 1968, the Italian artist Alighiero Boetti renamed himself Alighiero e ("and") Boetti, effectively expressing the duality of his personality and his work - and, by extension, the dichotomies of society and culture and art and life. Boetti was a central figure in the arte povera movement, a group of Italian artists in the late 1960s who expressly distanced themselves from commercialization and the slickness of Pop Art. These artists worked with a wide range of nonconventional materials - from wool and vegetables to silk and dirt. This illustrated study examines Boetti's 1988 work "Map" (or "Mappa"), one of the artist's series of woven tapestry maps of the world. In the cartography of this "Map", each country is depicted by its flag; its pre-postcommunist picture of the world shows the Soviet Union as a vast expanse of red in the upper eastern corner, projecting the last image of a long-failed socialist utopia.Opposed to "the myth of originality," Boetti saw his role as that of triggering a work of art rather than executing it.

"Map" (and the rest of the series) was based on a schema designed by Boetti's friend and collaborator Rinaldo Rossi and embroidered by a team of craftswomen in Kabul, Aghanistan. The finished work, with its brightly colored, painstakingly woven national flags, transforms the rigid norms of state division into a maze of colors. "Map" offers not just the beauty of a handcrafted carpet but a movingly interwoven pattern of interdependence that the world too often fails to recognize.