La Colonna Infame.
A thematic exhibition, “The Column of
Infamy”, presented in Erarta Museum of
Contemporary Art, St. Petersburg, Russia is
an art installation by an Italian artist from
Milan, Ariel Soulé, and an American sculptor
from Los Angeles, Simon Toparovsky. It
has been designated an official part of a
year-long cultural exchange program
between Russia and Italy. La Colonna Infame introduces the Russian audience to the
artists’ poetic, visual and philosophical
examination of dramatic events that took
place in Italy during the Plague in the 17th
century.
In ten years of working together between
two cities, Ariel Soulé and Simon
Topaovsky have created a number of
thematic exhibitions, which offer the artists’
interpretation of ideas and events from
world history that have influenced human
perception and brought about social
change.
La Colonna Infame presents an installation of
sculptures, metal structures, found objects,
and wood panels with mounted oil on
canvas paintings. The combination of
sensual and narrative contexts along with a
spectacular, site-specific layout of space in
four museum galleries, sets the stage for a
dynamic theatrical event, “a uniform
spectacle”. The treatment of images in dual
interpretation and the introduction of
objects multiplied in numbers, repeating
and shown as reflections, create a rhythm of
color, texture, and form within each section
of the installation and throughout the
whole exhibition. Painted abstracted forms
and color fields add to the emotional and
intellectual intensity of the work, while the
sculptural parts disclose the gradual development
of thought process. Together they
narrate a story full of allegories and
symbolism, poignant references and
counterpoints.
La Colonna Infame by Soulé and Toparovsky
is inspired by the essay Storia della Colonna
Infame (Story of the Column of Infamy) by
the renowned Italian writer Alessandro
Manzoni, written as an appendix to his
novel, The Betrothed, considered the best
novel of the century in Italian. I Promessi
Sposi (The Betrothed) was first published in
1827, but Manzoni was able to publish his
accusatory essay only with the second,
re-worked edition of the novel in 1840.
Exposing criminal prosecutions during the
old political system, Manzoni describes a
famous trial of 1630 in Milan.
The name of the essay refers to a column
standing in place of the demolished house
of Giangiacomo Mora. After Mora's execution
in 1630, the column was erected to
bring shame to his name and as a warning
to the citizens of Milan. In the novel The
Betrothed, Manzoni had already mentioned
the trial of the “anointers” of Milan, who
were accused of smearing the walls of the
city with "deadly ointments" infected with
the plague virus for the purpose of spreading
the disease and killing more citizens. |
Falsely accused, Giangiacomo Mora, a barber, and Guglielmo Piazza, the Commissioner
for Public Health in Milan, were
condemned, subjected to severe torture and
executed.
The famous Russian poet Alexander
Pushkin highly appreciated Manzoni’s
literary work. He had Manzoni’s books in
his library (Rukoiu Pushkina. pp. 555-556)
and the possibility cannot be excluded that
Manzoni’s description of the monstrous
torture and executions of innocent citizens
of Milan in his novel The Betrothed, had
provoked Pushkin’s response with a breakthrough
idea to celebrate life in the times of
the Black Death-the plague in A Feast
During the Plague, written in 1830. Despite
the prevailing belief at that time that the
Plague was God’s punishment, Pushkin
builds the events of his tragedy on the idea
of daring the Christian moral principles of
fear and humility, threat and penalty, giving
victory to the fearless person, challenging,
to the maximum, the forces that are beyond
his control. ¹
Soulé and Toparovsky likewise look for
their inspiration to the written accounts of
contemporaries and to the description of
dramatic events in works of the authors of
the time, having found a theme for their
new installation in the description of La
Colonna Infame in Manzoni’s essay. The
Russian audience, well familiar with
Pushkin’s work, will undoubtedly be able
to draw a parallel between the ‘little
tragedy’ by the Russian poet and the installation La Colonna Infame, both having
challenge to death as a theme.
Svetlana Darsalia, art curator
(excerpted from the essay for the catalog)
¹ Walsingham’s song from A.S. Pushkin, A Feast During the Plague, the Little
Tragedies, 1830.
There is rapture in the battle,
And on the edge of gloomy void,
And in the midst of fuming ocean,
In ghastly waves and fiery night,
In the Arabian tornado,
And in the gust of coming Plague.
What ever threatens us with loss,
Conceals for mortal heart
Strange pleasures-
As, may be, promise of immortal life!
Content is who amongst disaster
Could recognize and live it all.
Thus,--praise to you, oh, Plague!
The dark of grave won't be a scare,
We won't succumb to your vocation!
As one, we raise the bubbling cups,
And drink the breath of virgin-rose,--
Perhaps... already filled with Plague.
(translated by S. Darsalia)
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