الموقع: MAXXI - Museo nazionale delle arti del XXI secolo
العنوان: Via Guido Reni 4/a
Mismatched chairs, shared tables, low lights: the work here isn’t contemplated, it’s inhabited. The path turns the museum into a laboratory of encounters where the public becomes the material, the subject, and the measure of art. This is the core of “relational art,” a practice that since the 1990s has placed human relationships and their social contexts at the center rather than the autonomous object - not a painting to look at, but a space, a situation, a time to be lived together. Theorized at the end of the decade as “relational aesthetics,” this tendency has rewritten the vocabulary of the contemporary: participatory installations, dinners, games, shared environments in which the artist becomes a catalyst and meaning is built between people. On view are works and devices by a generation that opened art to the collective sphere - Vanessa Beecroft and her choreographies of presence, Maurizio Cattelan between irony and symbolic short-circuit, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster with narrative environments; Carsten Höller and perceptual experience, Pierre Huyghe and Philippe Parreno between fiction and biology, Rirkrit Tiravanija with conviviality and frying pans as social sculpture. Thirty years on, the lesson holds - the artwork is a relational device that shifts attention from object to bond, from uniqueness to co-presence, from authorship to participation. In an age of networks and algorithms, this story reminds us that art’s primary material can still - above all - be the quality of our being together.
A major retrospective reveals Elio Luxardo’s daring nude photography, where classical beauty meets modern tension, rediscovered after decades of secrecy.
Sphinxes, sarcophagi, statues of divinities, papyrus, everyday objects, funerary objects found in famous tombs tell in all its aspects the extraordinary civilization that flourished on the banks of the Nile for over 3 thousand years.
Pilgrims, Black Death and an earthquake: a papeless Rome adapts. Statues, inscriptions and coins trace the city’s story up to the pope’s return and the chapter of Jacopa.