Left direction
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Pierre Restany,  Bertini le néo-classique,  ed. Kamer, Paris, 1957

Pierre Restany e Franco Russoli,   Bertini,  ed. Galleria Blu, Milano, 1957

Lasse Söderberg,  Gianni Bertini, ed. Lunds Kunsthall, Lund, 1961

Jean-Clarence Lambert,  Peinture et dithyrambe,  ed. Mercure de France, Paris, 1962

Pierre Restany,  Bertini, ed. Musée de Poche, Paris, 1962

Jean Dypreau,  La vie illustrée de Bertini,  ed. Palais des Beaux-Arts, Bruxelles, 1963

René de Solier,  Bertini, ed. Giraud, Paris, 1963

Pierre Restany, Bertini,  ed. Stefanoni, Lecco, 1966

Piero Albertoni, Identikit,  ed. Castelli e Rosati, Milano, 1969

Guido Ballo,  Bertini, ed.  G.Prearo, Milano, 1971

Gérald Gassiot-Talabot,  La Mecque du mec,  ed. Galerie du Seine, Paris, 1972

Daniela Palazzoli,  Bertini, ed. Galleria Annunciata, Milano, 1975

Gillo Dorfles e Tommaso Trini,  Abbaco,  ed. La Margherita, Roma 1979

Italo Mussa , Abbaco e un percorso, ed. Planetario, Trieste, 1981

Italo Mussa,  Bertini fra cronaca e poesia, ed. Vanessa, Milano, 1982

Anne Tronche,  Rétrospective Bertini,  ed. Centre National des Arts Plastique,  Paris, 1984   

Flavio Vangeli,  Bertini, ed. Punto e Linea, Milano, 1987

Angela Vettese,  Bertini, ed. Bellora, Milano, 1990

Anne Tronche,  Gianni Bertini, rétrospective,  ed. Galerie Thorigny, Paris, 1991

Daniela Palazzoli,  Per non dimenticare, ed.Galleria Annunciata, Milano, 1991

Daniela Palazzoli, Bertini – giornale di bordo di un caporale di giornata, ed. Galleria Annunciata, Milano,1991

Denis Chevalier  e  Pierandrea Casati,  Bertini – Frammenti di una vita,  ed. Galleria Elleni, Bergamo, 1992

Luciano Caprile,  Bertini, ed. Agrifoglio, Milano, 1993

Pierre Restany,  Bertini – Rotella  Una vita per l’arte,  ed. Quadreria, Milano, 1997

Lara Vinca-Masini,  Bertini. Percorsi,  ed. Giunti, Firenze, 2000

Luciano Caprile, Gianni Bertini anni ’50, ed. Cardelli e Fontana, 2000

Martina Corgnati,  Gianni Bertini. Percorsi,  ed. Prearo, Pisa, 2002

Dominique Stella,  La schiuma del tempo/L’ecume du temps, ed. Mudima, Milano, 2004

Ilaria Bignotti,  Gianni Bertini – Immagini del tempo,  ed. Colossi arte contemporanea, Chiari (Bs), 2006

Luciano Caramel e Emma Zanella,  Bertini Opere1948-1952, Silvana Ed., 2006

Andrea Poleschi, Gianni Bertini. Percorsi e ricorsi, ed. Poleschi Arte, Milano 2007


carnevale_sito
Cries - I Gridi Leo Castelli can be well satisfied with Gianni Bertini's “Historic Cries”, p...
spot
2nd  Mec-Art Manifesto   Contemporary artistic life is dominated by a capital fact: by then eve...
1991_-_diurnal
Extract from "Le Diurnal" Paris, vendredi 4 novembre 1988 J'ai déjeuné chez des amis. En s...
shooting_bertini_sito
Our tale begins immediately after World War II. Paris at that time was still – despite the inter...
bertini-ritratto2
There are no translations available.             da "L'Unità" - sabato 10 luglio 2010 ...
pierre1
There are no translations available.             Salve Gianni, tu mi hai aiutato a vi...
spot_bertini
There are no translations available.                     una conversazione con ...
PICT0027
There are no translations available. GIANNI BERTINI Galleria d'Arte della Città di Žilina, ...
Post-IG copia
There are no translations available.     Gianni Bertini. Identikit 100a cura di Frances...
Right direction
Gianni Bertini PDF Print E-mail
shooting_bertini_sito

Our tale begins immediately after World War II. Paris at that time was still – despite the interim of the War – considered in artistic and intellectual circles as the world capital of culture, and therefore art. Picasso and Matisse led the way: two dominant figures whose achievements every painter dreamed of matching.
Yet in 1947-48 there suddenly emerged a new generation of artists who threw themselves into abstraction. Lyrical art, Informal art, a new school of Paris, tachisme... all these terms designated a new approach to painting, now based on the act of painting and the working of matter.

It was, then, perfectly logical or the young Gianni Bertini to embark on his artistic carrer with works halfway between abstract and figurative art. His painting were based on words and motifs taken directly from daily reality. He was one of the first to realize that abstract art was leading nowhere and that, compared to developments in New York, French art offered a mild-mannered variant of a type of art already in decline.
He became captivated by signs. There was no end to the number of the new signs produced in 1950s society: public areas were swamped in them. But, just when the art world was discovering the power of his works, Bertini made another about-turn coinciding with his move to Paris in 1951.

His training as a mathematician now returned to the fore. Functional curves, masses balanced according to the strict principles of classical composition... these were his guiding principles from now on. Alongside his painting, revealing the distant influence of Hartung, Bertini was soon to produce his first collages, leading naturally to splackthe production of emulsified canvases. These works placed Bertini in the vanguard of a new movement: Mec-art.

Mec-art (short for Mechanical  Art) surfaced in 1963, uniting a handful of artists (Pol Bury, Mimmo Rotella, Alain Jacquet) who employed photographic methods to transfer to canvas a composition or collage with an iconography taken directly from magazines. From Bertini, the process of reproducing mechanical images through painterly means involved appropriating society symbols and inserting them in an autonomous image that was objective in both form and content. This mechanical reproduction process enabled Bertini to produce numerous versions of the same picture, dealing a decisive blow to the notion of an “original work”. Bertini was one of the first to realize that the ordered world continuously juxtaposes new modes of representation.

His passion for cars, and also for women (or more precisely for representing women) dates from this period. Gradually, over the next few years, his work became imbued with the mythology of the 1960s and 70s, in a way that was both critical and mildly ironic. His characters and decors reflected, above all, the absurdity of the modes – and power of the codes – of representation. It was not until the 1990s that his work regained a certain gravitas. A series inspired by the Gulf War, and another by female nudes, both amounted to attacks on the “pornography” omnipresent in modern society.

Since the mid-60s and particularly since 1982 when he effected a synthesis of his different styles, Bertini has continued to produce a poetico-sociological form of art which, far from being a simple manipulation of the signs of our society, actually enjoys discarding these signs through the power of a purely pictorial approach.