The exhibition’s title refers in part to the horticultural practice of removing dead flower heads to stimulate the growth of the entire plant.
Taking up the notion of reducing to the essential, the show draws on a tight selection from Yto Barrada’s artistic oeuvre, including films, sculptures, installations, textiles and prints, some of which have been specially created for the occasion.
Among echoes, call-outs and visual experiments in the exhibition, one reference is to Barrada’s research into the pioneer colour theorist collector and philanthropist Emily Noyes Vanderpoel and her book, Color Problems: A Practical Manual for the Lay Student of Color originally intended for a female readership of dressmakers, flower painters and decorators. The author’s revolutionary colour-analysis charts converted images into geometric grids, through a systematic arrangement of the colour spectrum, which she dubbed the ‘music of light’. With the series Color Analysis she presents hand-dyed velvet grids, in which she applied Vanderpoel’s technique to transform images from Vanderpoel’s personal collection of antiques, to selected works from the MAO’s collection of Islamic art, and to a drawing by Marisa Merz.
Many natural dyes used in the work were made in The Mothership, an artist-led project by Barrada envisioned as an ‘ecofeminist-campus’ for growing, making, and learning natural dyes and radical indigenous lost traditions, in her garden in Tangier.
Admissions
Holders Torino+Piemonte Card
Over 65 years old, visitors aged between 10 and 26, senior citizens over 65, groups of a minimum of 10 persons, holders of Pyou Card, holders of Artsupp Card)
People with disabilities, Accompanying people with disabilities, Abbonamento Musei Piemonte, children up to 10 years of age, disabled visitors and their carers, holders of Abbonamento Musei and Torino + Piemonte Card, journalists with valid press card or accredited, ICOM members, Merz Foundation members, holders of membership card Collezione Peggy Guggenheim
Timetables
Monday closed