miércoles, 18 de julio de 2018

EXPANDED INTERIORS OPENS IN POMPEII


Contemporary artworks installed among the ancient ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum creating two art venues in stunning, historically resonant settings.


Catrin Huber in the House of the Cryptoporticus in Pompeii. Photograph by Amedeo Benestante

We hope that our project will be a stimulating and thought-provoking experience for visitors, helping them to look at these remarkable World Heritage sites from a new perspective.
Catrin Huber

Over the next year, two Roman houses - the House of the Beautiful Courtyard at Herculaneum and the House of the Cryptoporticus in Pompeii - will, quite literally, form the backdrop to a venture that aims to create a new dialogue between contemporary art, Roman wall painting and archaeological remains.

The driving force behind Expanded Interiors is Catrin Huber, a visual artist and senior lecturer in Newcastle University’s Fine Art Department. Huber has assembled a team of experts in archaeology and digital technology (Professor Ian Haynes, Dr Thea Ravasi, Alex Turner), and contemporary art (Rosie Morris) from across the University, in order to explore the relevance of Roman wall painting and artefacts for today’s fine art practice, and to test how artists can respond to the histories and complex nature of these archaeological sites within a contemporary context.

The project combines archaeological investigation, 3D digital scanning and printing to further explore and understand the houses. This meticulous process will also help inform the new and related artistic creations of Huber.



Truly inspiring setting
The £270k venture, located at the previously mentioned UNESCO World Heritage Sites, promises to be an arresting and unique experience. “We are thrilled that we have been given the opportunity to work in these historic, world-renowned towns”, says Huber. “The project will enable people to see contemporary art in a unique and truly inspiring setting, and we will use this once in a lifetime opportunity to create work that responds to the two Roman houses, and to Herculaneum and Pompeii. Both houses feature beautiful wall paintings, and this will inspire us to explore the design and purpose of these houses. The digital techniques we use will also help to promote fresh ways of exhibiting artefacts at archaeological sites.”

The artwork will be unveiled in the House of the Cryptoporticus, in Pompeii, on 14 July. The first of Huber’s site-specific installations went on show in Herculaneum’s House of the Beautiful Courtyard, on 17 May 2018. Both exhibitions will remain open to the public until 15 January 2019.

Although intended to be very different, these exhibitions complement each other and are closely related, since both will explore the relationship between wall decoration and objects.



Magnificent wall paintings
The exhibition at Pompeii responds to the magnificent, recently restored wall paintings at the House of the Cryptoporticus, where two installations of Huber’s wall paintings incorporate replicas of Roman objects.

The second contemporary installation at the House of the Cryptoporticus is a room of contemporary wall paintings. These relate to the rare Roman bathroom area of the house, with its richly painted, complex and illusionistic architectural designs. The contemporary paintings respond to a complex play of 2D and 3D space, open and closed walls, inside and outside space, and perspectival shifts.

One installation is in the rare underground passageway or cryptoporticus. This is decorated with a gradually unfolding frieze as part of a sequence of painted panels and herms (sacred objects made from stone). Huber’s work will juxtapose the Roman frieze with the painted colonnade. It also incorporates replicas of everyday Roman objects such as oil lamps and face pots, bridging the Roman and contemporary worlds, and suggesting designs for the future.

The exhibition at Herculaneum focuses on Roman objects and their (at times) artistically altered replicas. It concentrates on female figures and faces, and brings reproductions of exquisite, rarely seen artefacts held in store-rooms at Herculaneum back to the public area of the archaeological site. This contemporary installation will also work with encoded messages relating to the history and context of the site - The House of the Beautiful Courtyard was, for example, home to an Antiquarium (small museum) that was opened there in 1956 by Amedeo Maiuri, the archaeologist and director of the site at the time.

Exciting partnership
Both Herculaneum and Pompeii are incredibly popular with tourists”, says Huber. “We hope that our project is a stimulating and thought-provoking experience for visitors, helping them to look at these remarkable World Heritage sites from a new perspective.”


Newcastle University has set-up this exciting partnership with Parco Archeologico di Pompei, Parco Archeologico di Ercolano, The Herculaneum Conservation Project, and Art Editions North. Expanded Interiors is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
https://www.ncl.ac.uk/press/articles/latest/2018/07/expandedinteriors/
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