- Domenico Ruccia
Quel pazzo di Paolo Uccello
Renata Fabbri is pleased to present Quel pazzo di Paolo Uccello, the first solo exhibition by Domenico Ruccia (Bari, 1986) hosted at the project room of the gallery, Sotto. Curated by Lorenzo Madaro, the show brings together a series of unknown paintings inspired by the body of work of Florentine Renaissance painter Paolo Uccello.
“That fool of Paolo Uccello, in the space of a few years gave us all the possible hypotheses, he addressed all the issues, his approach was a new way of dealing with a situation. If we move through the centuries, we realise how things, already envisioned by Paolo Uccello – accentuating the perspective, changing certain aspects of it, continuing to change – are taken on in depth, until we arrive at Modern Art in which we no longer have the central perspective point, but the thousand perspective points of Cubism”, writes Luciano Fabro (Lezioni 1983-1995, edited by S. Fabro, Libri Scheiwiller, Milan 2022) about the extreme persistence of the lesson of this master, author of masterpieces such as St. George and the Dragon (1460 ca., National Gallery, London) and The Battle of San Romano (Uffizi, Florence).
Domenico Ruccia constantly works towards a redefinition of icons and visual elements from different fields: history of art, folklore, kitsch, cinema and much more. In this cycle of works dedicated to Paolo Uccello, Domenico Ruccia makes us realise how his is not only a discourse within painting, but first and foremost within the genesis and persistence of certain images. Thus, on the apparently flat surface of his oil-painted canvases, many scenes appear, tales of nature and dragons, but also pigs in the act of mating, while a pre-metaphysical landscape with a dim yet imaginative light builds an impalpable and dreamlike architecture.
Nothing surreal, of course. Domenico Ruccia’s work is real to the extent that it is sifted by a centuries-old memory capable of regenerating images, of reworking them, of returning them to us with his own gaze, that is often dense with wonder. The strength of Domenico Ruccia’s work lies precisely in that vocation towards the coexistence of worlds that fall within a specific aesthetic, cultural, visionary and at the same time real, concrete, palpable climate.
Therefore, his painting – he already proved this with a previous cycle dedicated to cinema and music – is a great journey in which to recognise the roots of an Italian and an international culture, deeply rooted in the stratification between folklore and research, high and low, sophisticated plurality and absolute simplicity of forms, settings, constructions. It is no coincidence that he himself says: “I always start from a real fact, belonging to the past, from which I then build on through images and imagination. If anything, the image becomes the right tool to misinterpret history, and then change it”.
Biography
Domenico Ruccia (Bari, 1986) lives and works in Milan. After completing his legal studies, he devoted himself completely to artistic research, attending the Brera Academy of Fine Arts, where he completed his studies in painting in 2021. Solo exhibitions include those at Fondazione Mario Moderni (Rome 2017), Chiostro del Bramante (Rome 2018), Il Crepaccio (Milan 2021), Collezione Pallavicini (Pavia 2023) and Iperstudio (Viareggio, 2023). His work has also been exhibited in public and private institutions such as Galleria Lorenzelli (Milan 2017), Museo d’Arte Grafica Marchionni (Cagliari 2017), ArtDate (Bergamo 2021), co_atto (Milan 2022), YAG/garage (Pescara 2023), Galleria Arrivada (Milan 2023), Osservatorio Futura (Turin 2023) and Galleria Civica Albani (Urbino 2023). He is among the artists featured in the Panorama mapping of the Quadriennale di Roma, with a studio visit by Lorenzo Madaro. In 2022 he was in residence at VIR Viafarini-in-residence in Milan.
Renata Fabbri is pleased to present Quel pazzo di Paolo Uccello, the first solo exhibition by Domenico Ruccia (Bari, 1986) hosted at the project room of the gallery, Sotto. Curated by Lorenzo Madaro, the show brings together a series of unknown paintings inspired by the body of work of Florentine Renaissance painter Paolo Uccello.
“That fool of Paolo Uccello, in the space of a few years gave us all the possible hypotheses, he addressed all the issues, his approach was a new way of dealing with a situation. If we move through the centuries, we realise how things, already envisioned by Paolo Uccello – accentuating the perspective, changing certain aspects of it, continuing to change – are taken on in depth, until we arrive at Modern Art in which we no longer have the central perspective point, but the thousand perspective points of Cubism”, writes Luciano Fabro (Lezioni 1983-1995, edited by S. Fabro, Libri Scheiwiller, Milan 2022) about the extreme persistence of the lesson of this master, author of masterpieces such as St. George and the Dragon (1460 ca., National Gallery, London) and The Battle of San Romano (Uffizi, Florence).
Domenico Ruccia constantly works towards a redefinition of icons and visual elements from different fields: history of art, folklore, kitsch, cinema and much more. In this cycle of works dedicated to Paolo Uccello, Domenico Ruccia makes us realise how his is not only a discourse within painting, but first and foremost within the genesis and persistence of certain images. Thus, on the apparently flat surface of his oil-painted canvases, many scenes appear, tales of nature and dragons, but also pigs in the act of mating, while a pre-metaphysical landscape with a dim yet imaginative light builds an impalpable and dreamlike architecture.
Nothing surreal, of course. Domenico Ruccia’s work is real to the extent that it is sifted by a centuries-old memory capable of regenerating images, of reworking them, of returning them to us with his own gaze, that is often dense with wonder. The strength of Domenico Ruccia’s work lies precisely in that vocation towards the coexistence of worlds that fall within a specific aesthetic, cultural, visionary and at the same time real, concrete, palpable climate.
Therefore, his painting – he already proved this with a previous cycle dedicated to cinema and music – is a great journey in which to recognise the roots of an Italian and an international culture, deeply rooted in the stratification between folklore and research, high and low, sophisticated plurality and absolute simplicity of forms, settings, constructions. It is no coincidence that he himself says: “I always start from a real fact, belonging to the past, from which I then build on through images and imagination. If anything, the image becomes the right tool to misinterpret history, and then change it”.
Biography
Domenico Ruccia (Bari, 1986) lives and works in Milan. After completing his legal studies, he devoted himself completely to artistic research, attending the Brera Academy of Fine Arts, where he completed his studies in painting in 2021. Solo exhibitions include those at Fondazione Mario Moderni (Rome 2017), Chiostro del Bramante (Rome 2018), Il Crepaccio (Milan 2021), Collezione Pallavicini (Pavia 2023) and Iperstudio (Viareggio, 2023). His work has also been exhibited in public and private institutions such as Galleria Lorenzelli (Milan 2017), Museo d’Arte Grafica Marchionni (Cagliari 2017), ArtDate (Bergamo 2021), co_atto (Milan 2022), YAG/garage (Pescara 2023), Galleria Arrivada (Milan 2023), Osservatorio Futura (Turin 2023) and Galleria Civica Albani (Urbino 2023). He is among the artists featured in the Panorama mapping of the Quadriennale di Roma, with a studio visit by Lorenzo Madaro. In 2022 he was in residence at VIR Viafarini-in-residence in Milan.
- Serena Vestrucci
- Bea Bonafini
- Bea Bonafini
September 8 — November 24, 2024
Sant Cugat del Vallè
Monastery of Sant Cuga
- Giovanni Kronenberg
Palazzo Maccafani, Palazzo Iannucci and the streets of Pereto, L’Aquila
July 14 – August 18 2024
Opening Saturday July 13, 5pm-8p
- Athanasios Argianas
P.E.T PROJECTS, Athens
June 12 – September 29, 2024
Curated by George Bekirakis and Angelo Plessas
Opening Wed June 12, 2024, 6-10 pm
- Lulù Nuti
Palazzo Collicola, Spoleto (PG), Italy
June 28 – September 20, 2024
Curated by Spazio Taverna