Maria Adele del Vecchio

Tonite let's all make love in London

18 January – 22 February 2014

07
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
The tapestry of delights, 2014
type-writer ink, paper, 71 x 51 cm
27
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
James Lowe Interview, 2014
mov file - 14 min
17
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Tonite Record, 2014
Vinyl, artist designed record slevee
LP 33 rpm: 40 min
02
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Frozen Laughter #2, 2014
oil and plaster on canvas, mdf plinth
canvas: 150 x 100 x 2 cm - plinth: 160 x 34.5 x 35 cm
01
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Frozen Laughter #1, 2014
oil and plaster on canvas, mdf plinth
canvas: 100 x 90 x 2 cm - plinth: 115 x 35 x 35 cm
dsc_0349_nil_40x35cm-copy
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Open Naked Eye #3,
2013
C-Print, 35 x 40 cm
dsc_0357_-nil_30x24cm-copy
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Open Naked Eye #4, 2013
C-Print, 24 x 30 cm
dsc_0314_nil_40x30cm-copy
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Open Naked Eye #2, 2013
C-Print, 30 x 40 cm
21
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Open Naked Eye #1, 2013
C-Print
30 x 40 cm
25
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Untitled, 2014
mirror, wood, 161.5 x 103 x 55 cm
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014
09
Maria Adele Del Vecchio
Tonite let's all make love in London, 2014
2 speakers, CD player
40 min.
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014
Maria Adele Del Vecchio, "Tonite let's all make love in London"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, Berlin 2014

“Tonite let’s all make love in London” is a project that intersects formal choices of different kinds, while continuing to comply with those that are the axioms of my artistic research, connected with a focus on the cognitive/perceptive processes of the human mind. The direction here is not scientific/speculative, but political, in a certain sense; the artwork contributes to expand awareness, to widen and “raise” consciousness of the self, of the other, of history and space.

Psychedelic (*) music, among the various expressions of modern rock, is the best soundtrack for my path of “liberation of the self,” both from a private and artistic viewpoint.

The show includes an audio work, a 40-minute track – realized with the Neapolitan musician and sound designer Marco Messina – that combines through cut-ups and today’s tools of sound design, American and English psychedelic songs from the 1960s: the idea is that certain combinations of sounds are truly capable of triggering particular perceptive mechanisms in the listener.

I cannot imagine any journey towards cognition and perception of the existing world without considering the relationship with color. The monochrome canvas is interpreted in its possible shadings, corrupted by the presence of material elements: the suggestion is to look at the world around us, renouncing assertive (obtuse?) determinism in favor of openness to the possibilities of doubt: blue is not always itself, and the same goes for yellow, though without denying the precise essence of blue and yellow in common and shared perception.

(*) The term “psychedelic” – that comes from the Greek, and is composed of two words, psykhé (soul) and dêlos (visible, clear) – was coined for the first time in 1956 by the psychiatrist Humphry Osmond, who in a letter to Aldous Huxley used it to define substances that “free thought from the superstructures of social patterns.”

Special thanks to James Lowe and the Electric Prunes, Marco Messina, Mauro Marchingilio, Marta Orlando, Paul Griffits and Jana Nowack.