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The Architecture of Madness
Leon Ferrari, February 18 - April 1, 2023

The Architecture of Madness: Leon Ferrari

Past exhibition
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The Architecture of Madness, Leon Ferrari
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LEÓN FERRARI: The Architecture of Madness
February 18 -  April 1, 2023


Pan American Art Projects is pleased to announce The Architecture of Madness, a solo exhibition of works by León Ferrari. The Architecture of Madness will be on view from February 18 of 2023, with an opening reception on Saturday February 18, from 6 to 9 pm. 
 
Having left Buenos Aires for political exile in the great metropolis of Sao Paulo, Leon Ferrari was struck by the  multitude of people, and their very similar lifestyles: he expressed this repetitiveness in a series of heliographs.  Twenty seven designs, made between 1980 and 1986, were printed with the Letraset technique used by architects. He saw the heliographs as representing “the absurdity of contemporary society, that sort of  madness necessary for everything to look normal”[L.F.] 
 
There was one additional reference in the rigidity of repetitiveness: an association with the horror of  regimentation imposed by the military dictatorship in Argentina, which had murdered his son in the family home  and forced him to take the rest of the family to safety abroad. This association may explain why Ferrari conveyed  with a sense of horror the way of life in super-urban civilizations. 
 
From the viewer’s point of view, unaware of the artist’s intent and background, chaos and confusion seem to reign; but from the point of view of the inhabitants of these almost identical spaces, they seem to live a normal  life in their urban labyrinthine nightmare. 
 
Perhaps in search of a respite from that ‘madness’, Ferrari turned to sound; he became interested in producing  music, which he achieved with his tubular sculptures. Sensitive to wind, touch, and movement, these created  chaotic compositions, out of rhythm, reminiscent of his drawings on paper from the 60’s, in which the hand  might suddenly jettison downward two lines or more, in total break with conventional order. Ferrari’s written  drawings from the 70s were organized more traditionally, along parallel horizontal lines quite reminiscent of a  sheet of music. Gone are the exuberant transgressions of the Sixties, which must have appeared chaotic to his  audience, much as the heliographs did twenty years later in a return to chaos. 
 
We find again a visual as well as philosophical correlation between Ferrari’s small figures of the heliographs and  musical notes. Indeed, his first institutional exhibit in Sao Paulo included, along with drawings, both heliographs  and musical sculptures. [It should be noted that Ferrari discontinued his experiments in the creation of sound  when he learned that Harry Bertoia was working along similar lines]. 
 
Most of the heliographs are nothing more than the repetition of the same image, whether a human figure, or a  door, or a bidet: a reiteration necessary to describe ‘normal’ human conditions. These could be seen as the  equivalent, in music, of simple refrains, repeated over and over until the audience joins in, and forgets to escape.  In other heliographs, there is total chaos, as where masses of people march in opposite or perpendicular  directions, destined to crash, and they do. In still others, nonsensical doors open in succession into other spaces without a final exit, in an impossible architectural design; or highways go around in circles, again without exit. The two types of heliographs represent extremes of life, both being surrealistic and incomprehensible. 
 
Toward the end of his life we produced for Ferrari a photogravure which represented a final synthesis of his work:  lines instead of words, as everything has been said; a musical sheet without notes, just their memory. And yet,  upon close inspection, we see that the lines have subtle movements, they are still alive: they carry the ghosts of  thousands of interpretations, of arrangements, of compositions. 
 
With the help of the Ferrari Foundation, which provided the one we were missing, we are able to present them all twenty six in this exhibition.
 
Robert Borlenghi 
[In affectionate observance of ten years since Leon’s passing, in 2013]
 
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  • León Ferrari

    León Ferrari

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