Wednesday, 21 December 2011
Tuesday, 20 December 2011
NUEVA SERIE "FACCINE NEI FAGIOLI"
Wednesday, 23 November 2011
EXPO "SEXY" EX TERESA ARTE ACTUAL
Thursday, 10 November 2011
EXPO COLECTIVA GALERIA AGUAFUERTE
ULTIMOS DIAS PARA VER LA
EXPOSICIÓN COLECTIVA "GUERRA VIOLENCIA Y MUERTE"
en la cual participo con 2 piezas sobre el concepto de la mujer-juguete.
Galería Aguafuerte, Guanajuato 118, colonia Roma.
http://www.aguafuertegaleria.
FINO AL 15 DI NOVEMBRE
Presento las esculturas "Sexy Machine I" y "Sexy Machine II"
Wednesday, 9 November 2011
SOLO SHOW Unconventional Beauty
Estoy profundamente agradecida por el profesionalismo del Director Alfredo Matus, y de todo el equipo, en su apoyo para organización, montaye y difusion. La inauguracion fue un exito, hasta incluso me pidieron autografos!! Esto fue el boletin de prensa, que fue publicado en varios periodicos, ente los cuales El Universal, LA Jornada, Milenio.
BOLETIN DE PRENSA:
Ciudad de México • La exposición “Unconventional Beauty”, de la artista plástica Francesca Dalla Benetta (Florencia, Italia, 1977), fue abierta hoy en la Galería José María Velasco de esta ciudad, por el director del recinto, Alfredo Matus, quien explicó brevemente el contexto de la obra.
Dijo que se trata de una muestra de 32 piezas realizadas entre 2009 y 2010, esculturas de diversos formatos y materiales donde viven y prevalecen los conceptos de hibridación, genética y lo bizarro, para mostrar al espectador una percepción de la belleza que fuerza a romper todos los paradigmas.
Las piezas muestran a seres y objetos que parecen filtrarse en lo cotidiano, en un ejercicio simbólico de cruce de dimensiones, con el sello personal de la autora, influenciado por el carnaval italiano y el cine de horror, con un juego de asociaciones que la ubica en el ámbito del arte objeto.
“Unconventional Beauty” reúne 32 piezas escultóricas creadas en plastilina epóxica y resina, con acabados en óleo y aerosol, que buscan generar duda e inquietud en el espectador, para que éste encuentre “algo muy especial, tal vez inexplicable, que lo haga sentir atraído por lo no convencional”.
Tras señalar lo anterior, la artista, quien reside en esta ciudad desde hace varios años, dijo que el medio para lograr esa idea fueron “los cuerpos torcidos, anatomías híbridas y los temas mitológicos que se trenzan con un imaginario absurdo de seres en potencia dentro de una escultura lograda”.
La artista, amante del cine fantástico y de horror, dijo que su obra se distingue por resaltar la belleza: “No significa ni equilibrio ni armonía”; sin embargo, implica propiciar la capacidad de ver más allá de la apariencia, la ternura en un cuerpo feo”, mencionó, emocionada, en el acto de apertura.
Sunday, 18 September 2011
Wednesday, 7 September 2011
Saturday, 30 July 2011
TECNIQUE 2
2- Epoxic clay. I build a structure with wire. I cover it with rigid urethan foam which I shape until the volume is quite perfect. The foam I use is a bicomponent one. It is cheap, but remember to use a filter mask to avoid intoxication! You can use the sealer one. It's easier, until you learn to control the bicomponent one.
This phase is important because it ease the entire process... if the volume is imperfect, you'll spend lot of time repairing it and trying to change it. Then I cover the foam with a thin coat of epoxic clay. The difficulty here is that it dries in an hour, so you have to give detail immediately. The trick is work in part, like a puzzle, until the surface is done. I work the texture with metal dental tools, to give shape and texture. Some people prefer to use a minidrill to give details. I don't, but the results I saw are great!
The final step is paint it with oil, acrylic, water colors, spray cans, aerograph...
Here I'm shaping foam with knives and sandpaper
Here another work in process: you can see the wire structure covered by foam (the pink thing: I colored it to seal the dust of the foam). A thin epoxic clay coat cover part of the body. It is already detailed with texture. The sketch show the wanted result.
Another work in progress: life size.
This is almost finished, already painted.
TECNIQUE 1
THE FIRST ONE
1- Resin and fiberglass. It is the one I used time ago, and now I use only sometimes. I build the structure in rigid urethan foam, or metal, or what helps me the best, then I work with wax clay. I made a silicon mould with rigid shell (plaster bandages or fiberglass) and I cast it in fiberglass.
Finally, I clean all the edges and repair the imperfections with gelcoat or epoxic clay, and I paint it!
Below, you can see "Gordo" during the mould process: the pink is just acrilyc spay to help the removal of the barrier (division between the parts of the shell). It is a 6 parts mould: it is built in "rings": legs, bust, head, each in 2 parts.
Here the front of the legs is covered by silicon rubber.
Here a coat of silicon on the face!
Here the recent opened mould of Mushroomoon (first picture), with the clay model half destroyed... and the resin cast (second picture) while I'm repairing it with putty.
Sunday, 10 July 2011
URBAN ART IN TORINO
Here the results of 3 pieces in Torino....
Torino, zona Piazza della Repubblica
Torino, Via Ormea
Torino, Via S.Pellico
MUSHROOMOON en TALLER EN VIDA
En el "taller en Vida" en 75ºcolor de Arturo Negrete!!
Fue un honor trabajar con personas tan profesionales y expertas,
sin embargo tan sencillas y amigables.
Una experiencia enriquecidora! Graaaacias a todos de corazon!
(es de buena suerte tocar las bubis de Mushroomoon!)
WHY MUSHROOMOON?
The naked truth? Mushroomoon stems from a profound moment of doubt about my art, its value for those who see it. It comes from a strong criticism by a dealer at the time to show him my portfolio, a few sharp words "your art you can not be sold and can not be in a gallery. "
My first reaction was total paralysis, pain and inner drama, disorientation and fear. Two days without moving a muscle.
When I decided to do something about, and I could find the good in the criticism, my mind opened to new possibilities. Maybe commonplace (everyone is making urban art, in these days) but for me, so and shy (really?), meant and still means having the courage to get in view in spite of everything, choose the street as a personal gallery, waiting for other things or new activities.
Yes, Mushroomoon comes from the imperative to find a place for me in the world, perhaps selfishly, but without compromise.
In those days in late December 2010, I rediscovered the enthusiasm to work feverishly for hours at a precise objective: to put my sculpture in Plaza Rio de Janeiro, in Mexico City, where I live.
And I decided that ... it would be the largest in my collection, bigger than me and it would be at a point where it was impossible not to see her passing by.
On the night of December 31, while everyone drunk were celebrating the New Year, I was mixing cement in a corner of the park of the Plaza, assisted and covered by my husband Diego and Lobo, a friend.
That's the way this tender-eyed creature was born. It remained in the street for only six days before the police are noticing the irregularity and carried her off.
Now, after a massive recovery operation, it is safe, at home, waiting for a new journey ...
MUSHROOMOON SECOND EPISODE !
This time is a small, tender little one.
If you want to see it, you can find it in Colima street, corner with Cuahutemoc, Colonia Roma.
Of course, currently it was removed by the police, but this time I didn't move a muscle to have it back... I prefer to go on with new interventions!
MUSHROOMOON IS HOME... and THE SECOND PART OF THE STORY
Mirham Ascencio was the woman who saw how the policemen were removing Mushroomoon from his base, to take it away. Her intention was just taking a few picture of the work, but she arrive in the right place at the right time...
Mirham wrote this, and I just want you to read these words, that proves a deep love for art, in spite of all the rules, and thank her from the heart, because I really don't know what would happen to Mushroomoon without her!
"I just did what any one else would do if you see someone starting something beautiful. I tried to avoid it and ask for an explanation. The sad part is, that they appellate to the City Law that says that the public route is for everyone and that you cannot attempt versus people’s rights by installing something in the city without permission.
I said the art is also for everyone, for the people, they answer they were spaces specially designed to this labor.
This people, refused to show me any id, but they did told me they would take the Mushroomoon to the City´s Government Office.
By the time all this ended, I search by Facebook to Francesca and let her know about the destination of her wonderful piece.
Now I know Mushroomoon is backing home where it belongs and I’m happy for that.
Congratulations Francesca for your work and I hope someday our government realizes the importance of cultural development and that they support these actions instead of censured them.
That’s all I can tell, and as I said before, I think this is what everyone would have done.
Mirham"
THE STORY OF MUSHROOMOON
It's time to tell what happened to Mushroomoon.
Maybe someone of you passed by the place where it was, and you could only see the empty base.
Some of you sent me message, or called me, asking. But I was not able to tell what happened. I just received the news, without knowing who took it away. I confess I was entrateining the idea that some crazy and passionate fan had stolen it, and now he was spending long hours admiring my sculpture in his sitting room.
But the story is much less poetic.
The afternoon of Jenuary 6th, a couple of policemen from the Delegation stopped their van near to Mushroomoon, forced it, loaded it on the truck, and took it away.
The very cool part of the story is how I knew it.
Late at night, on 7th Jenuary, someone called me on my mobile. The woman's voice told "Hi, you don't know me, but I witnessed how they took your sculpture away". She introduced herself as Mirham Ascencio, and gave me all the details. she told me how she arrived with her camara, to take pictures of the work, cause she liked it so much, and in this very moment she saw the van arrived and the policemen catch the sculpture. I was moved: she threw herself against the two "brutes", and tried to convince them that the sculpture was a beautiful piece of art, and it was worthy of staying where it was. She really defended my work and advocated for its rights!
That's great, I thought! She was not able to stop them, but it is the most touching demostration of art love that I've ever been involved in.
The story goes that Mirham told me where to find Mushroomoon, so I went, and I paid the fine.
In a week it will be home again...
THE FIRST URBAN INTERVENTION
I love this part of the city, the trees, the fountains, the people, the galleries. The athmosphere here is quite inspirational. Art is something you breath here!
And, most of all, I really wanted to give "a special gift" to the city that has been offering me a home for 5 years.
Thank you Mexico!