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{{short description|Italian artist and sculptor|bot=PearBOT 5}}
'''Roberto Cordone''' (born April 11, 1941 in [[Vallecrosia]], Liguria) is an Italian artist and sculptor. He has spent most of his career in [[Cologne]], Germany. His signature work, the monumental sculpture, ''Movimento Ellissoidale'' (2001), made of aluminium alloy, stands in front of the [[ARAG-Tower]] in [[Düsseldorf]], designed by Sir [[Norman Foster]].
{{Orphan|date=July 2020}}
[[File:Cordone Portrait.jpg|thumb| Roberto Cordone (2001)]]

'''Roberto Cordone''' (born 11 April 1941 in [[Vallecrosia]], Liguria) is an Italian artist and sculptor. He has spent most of his career in [[Cologne]], Germany. His signature work, the monumental sculpture, ''Movimento Ellissoidale'' (2001), made of aluminium alloy, stands in front of the [[ARAG-Tower]] in [[Düsseldorf]], designed by Sir [[Norman Foster]].

[[File:Roberto-Cordone.jpg|thumb|Roberto Cordone (2001)]]


== Life ==
== Life ==
Cordone received his artistic training from the painter [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzo_Maiolino Enzo Maiolino] in [[Bordighera]], Italy. In 1960, he emigrated to [[Cologne]], Germany and increasingly shifted his focus to sculpture. Since 1966, he has participated in solo and group exhibitions in German and Italian museums and galleries. His commissions for large-scale works are found in many public places in Germany. In 1969, he received the German award [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ars_viva ars viva]. Cordone has a large number of sculptures in museums, including the [[Museum Ludwig]] in Cologne and [[Museum Kunstpalast]] in Düsseldorf, and the [[Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna]], Rome. Cordone is an elected member of the [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accademia_tiberina Accademia Tiberina] in Rome. Today, he lives with his wife in Cologne, Germany.
Cordone received his artistic training from the painter [[:it:Enzo Maiolino|Enzo Maiolino]] in [[Bordighera]], Italy. In 1960, he emigrated to [[Cologne]], Germany and increasingly shifted his focus to sculpture. Since 1966, he has participated in solo and group exhibitions in German and Italian museums and galleries. His commissions for large-scale works are found in many public places in Germany. In 1969, he received the German award [[:de:Ars viva|ars viva]]. Cordone has a large number of sculptures in museums, including the [[Museum Ludwig]] in Cologne and [[Museum Kunstpalast]] in Düsseldorf, and the [[Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna]], Rome. Cordone is an elected member of the [[:it:Accademia tiberina|Accademia Tiberina]] in Rome. Today, he lives with his wife in Cologne, Germany.
[[File:Cordone at work Arag sculpture.jpg|thumb|Roberto Cordone at work on Movimento Ellissoidale (2001)]]

[[File:Cordone at work.jpg|thumb|Cordone at work on ''Movimento Ellissoidale'']]


== Work ==
== Work ==
Cordone's work consists mostly of abstract sculptures of bronze, stainless steel, and alloys of titanium and aluminum. His early works are linked to the tradition of the classical modernism of the 20th century, which deemphasizes representation in favor of the abstract. Cordone seeks new content in abstract sculptures. The art historian Uta Gerlach-Laxner stated that his work evolved to often suggest associations with the sensory-organic world, forming a "symbiosis of the organically grown and the technically constructed."<ref name=UGL> Uta Gerlach-Laxner. Roberto Cordone, Galerie Schlichtenmaier. [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schloss_Dätzingen Schloss Dätzingen], 2011. Translated from German. [http://www.schlichtenmaier.de/logicio/client/schlichtenmaier/archive/document/schlichtenmaier_cordone.pdf Link to exhibit catalogue]</ref> According to the art historian [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Ost Hans Ost], Cordone succeeds in creating “a higher nature,” introducing the viewer to a “new world of visual and spiritual experience.”<ref name=Ost> Hans Ost. Roberto Cordone, Galerie Apicella. Cologne 1990.</ref>
Cordone's work consists mostly of abstract sculptures of bronze, stainless steel, and alloys of titanium and aluminum. His early works are linked to the tradition of the classical modernism of the 20th century, which deemphasizes representation in favor of the abstract. Cordone seeks new content in abstract sculptures. The art historian Uta Gerlach-Laxner stated that his work evolved to often suggest associations with the sensory-organic world, forming a "symbiosis of the organically grown and the technically constructed."<ref name="UGL">Uta Gerlach-Laxner. Roberto Cordone, Galerie Schlichtenmaier. [[:de:Schloss Dätzingen|Schloss Dätzingen]], 2011. Translated from German. [http://www.schlichtenmaier.de/logicio/client/schlichtenmaier/archive/document/schlichtenmaier_cordone.pdf Link to exhibit catalogue]</ref> According to the art historian [[:de:Hans Ost|Hans Ost]], Cordone succeeds in creating “a higher nature,” introducing the viewer to a “new world of visual and spiritual experience.”<ref name="Ost">Hans Ost. Roberto Cordone, Galerie Apicella. Cologne 1990.</ref>[[File:Roberto_Cordone_Perpendicolari.jpg|thumb|Roberto Cordone ''Perpendicolari'' in his studio in Cologne]]A distinctive characteristic of many of his sculptures flows from his specific use of hard-to-cast alloys and intense workmanship with these materials to reflect light. His technique, which required him to expand his expertise in metalworking, grew from the realization that “light-reflections could be used to substitute for many of the lines and contours” in a sculpture.<ref name="Weiss">Evelyn Weiss, “Interview with Roberto Cordone,” in Roberto Cordone, Perpendicolari—Verticalli Arbeiten von 1967-1975, [[:de:Deutsches Klingenmuseum|Deutsches Klingenmuseum]] [[Solingen]], 26.10-7.12.1975. In English.</ref>

A distinctive characteristic of many of his sculptures flows from his specific use of hard-to-cast alloys and intense workmanship with these materials to reflect light. His technique, which required him to expand his expertise in metalworking, grew from the realization that “light-reflections could be used to substitute for many of the lines and contours” in a sculpture.<ref name=Weiss>Evelyn Weiss, “Interview with Roberto Cordone,” in Roberto Cordone, Perpendicolari—Verticalli Arbeiten von 1967-1975, [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deutsches_Klingenmuseum Deutsches Klingenmuseum] [[Solingen]], 26.10-7.12.1975. In English. </ref>




== Perpendicolari ==
== Perpendicolari ==
His ''Perpendicolari'' sculptures, first developed in the middle of the 1960s, were a "step from the figurative to the abstract, and at the same time, a breakthrough to artistic autonomy."<ref name=UGL /> The life-size ''Perpendicolari'' works are slender metal sculptures of vertical axiality, free of a pedestal and imperceptibly attached to the ceiling by thin wires. They only lightly touch the ground and can be subtly twisted by the slightest impact so that they seem to float. Movement and apparent weightlessness become the characteristic of Cordone’s artistic expression. “In spite of what are enormous weights,” according to the German art critic [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Vitt Walter Vitt], Cordone achieves a property that might be described as “making light of the heavy.”<ref name=Vitt> Walter Vitt, ''Making Light of the Heavy'', in Roberto Cordone, ''Movimenti'', [[Museum Morsbroich]], [[Leverkusen]], 1995.</ref> With their form related to "human dimensions and proportions," according to Ost, "the Perpendiculari seem to float in space, weightless like a dancer, propelling himself into the air.” <ref name=Ost />
His ''Perpendicolari'' sculptures, first developed in the middle of the 1960s, were a "step from the figurative to the abstract, and at the same time, a breakthrough to artistic autonomy."<ref name="UGL" /> The life-size ''Perpendicolari'' works are slender metal sculptures of vertical axiality, free of a pedestal and imperceptibly attached to the ceiling by thin wires. They only lightly touch the ground and can be subtly twisted by the slightest impact so that they seem to float. Movement and apparent weightlessness become the characteristic of Cordone's artistic expression. “In spite of what are enormous weights,” according to the German art critic [[:de:Walter Vitt|Walter Vitt]], Cordone achieves a property that might be described as “making light of the heavy.”<ref name="Vitt">Walter Vitt, ''Making Light of the Heavy'', in Roberto Cordone, ''Movimenti'', [[Museum Morsbroich]], [[Leverkusen]], 1995.</ref> With their form related to "human dimensions and proportions," according to Ost, "the Perpendiculari seem to float in space, weightless like a dancer, propelling himself into the air.”<ref name="Ost" />


== Vertikali ==
== Vertikali ==
The ''Vertikali'' sculptures were conceived for the outdoors, anchored to the earth, often in correspondence with the surrounding architecture.<ref>[http://welt-der-form.net/Duesseldorf/Cordone-1986-Atlanten-1a.html Cordone Vertikali] Accessed February 15, 2019.
[[File:Cordone_Studio_2020.jpg|thumb|Studio Roberto Cordone ''Perpendicolari'' ]]
</ref> They are stainless steel sculptures, larger than life, built by using segments of cylinders and spheres welded together in symmetrical or asymmetrical relationships.
The ''Vertikali'' sculptures were conceived for the outdoors, anchored to the earth, often in correspondence with the surrounding architecture.<ref> [http://welt-der-form.net/Duesseldorf/Cordone-1986-Atlanten-1a.html Cordone Vertikali] Accessed February 15, 2019.

</ref> They are stainless steel sculptures, larger than life, built by using segments of cylinders and spheres welded together in symmetrical or asymmetrical relationships. <ref name=Weiss /> Because of their highly polished, reflective metal surfaces, these sculptures reflect the surrounding environment and architecture and are in a constant process of change.<ref name=Weiss />
<ref name="Weiss" /> Because of their highly polished, reflective metal surfaces, these sculptures reflect the surrounding environment and architecture and are in a constant process of change.<ref name="Weiss" />


== Componibili ==
== Componibili ==
The original sculptures ''Componibili'' of 1972 and 1973 were made from a special industrial polyurethane and based on the tetrahedral model of the [[carbon]] atom. They could be set up in a variety of ways, becoming ever new forms. A further development, which originated from the middle element of the ''Componibili'', is the sculpture ''Cyclopentan'' (1973). It is now in the [[Bayer|Bayer]] collection and was exhibited in 2013 in the [[Martin-Gropius-Bau]] in Berlin.<ref> [https://www.berliner-zeitung.de/kultur/bayer-ausstellung--von-beckmann-bis-warhol--im-gropius-bau-6948148 Bayer exhibit] Exhibt ''Von Beckmann bis Warhol'' in the [[Martin-Gropius-Bau|Gropius-Bau]]. Photo 11 in photo gallery. Accessed February 14, 2019. </ref>
The original sculptures ''Componibili'' of 1972 and 1973 were made from a special industrial polyurethane and based on the tetrahedral model of the [[carbon]] atom. They could be set up in a variety of ways, becoming ever new forms. A further development, which originated from the middle element of the ''Componibili'', is the sculpture ''Cyclopentan'' (1973). It is now in the [[Bayer]] collection and was exhibited in 2013 in the [[Martin-Gropius-Bau]] in Berlin.<ref>[https://www.berliner-zeitung.de/kultur/bayer-ausstellung--von-beckmann-bis-warhol--im-gropius-bau-6948148 Bayer exhibit] Exhibit ''Von Beckmann bis Warhol'' in the [[Martin-Gropius-Bau|Gropius-Bau]]. Photo 11 in photo gallery. Accessed February 14, 2019.</ref>
[[File:Perpendicolare Elicoidale.jpg|thumb|Perpendicolare Elicoidale (1988) at Art Cologne, 2014]] These sculptures recently celebrated their 50th anniversary with an exhibition in [[Cologne]].[https://www.designboom.com/art/roberto-cordones-iconic-componibili-sculptures-celebrate-their-50th-anniversary-in-cologne-drop-dead-ltd-11-24-2023/].


== Velari ==
== Velari ==
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== Elicoidali ==
== Elicoidali ==
The ''Elicoidali'' sculptures are the "logical result of long artistic work” from the single vertical axial ''Perpendiculari'' to sculptures able to freely move in a room, changing their axis as they move.<ref name=Ost /> No longer suspended or standing in a fixed place, the Elicoidali represent a "new design principle and a remarkable breadth of variation" in the inventory of forms.<ref name=UGL /> They appear to constantly change shape as they move. By reducing their plastic volume, they receive an optical lightness despite the heaviness and hardness of the material, which seem to make them independent of the laws of gravity.<ref> [http://welt-der-form.net/Morsbroich/Cordone-Movimento_elicoidale-1-auto.html Cordone Elicoidale] Accessed on February 14, 2019 </ref> According to Vitt, Cordone “succeeds in dematerializing the mass of these sculptures to a high degree.”<ref name=Vitt /> As the ''Elicoidali'' are rolled, their edges form a continuous helicoid, or spiral, on the surface, whereby the three-dimensional sculptures appear projected on a plane.
The ''Elicoidali'' sculptures are the "logical result of long artistic work” from the single vertical axial ''Perpendiculari'' to sculptures able to freely move in a room, changing their axis as they move.<ref name=Ost /> No longer suspended or standing in a fixed place, the Elicoidali represent a "new design principle and a remarkable breadth of variation" in the inventory of forms.<ref name=UGL /> They appear to constantly change shape as they move. By reducing their plastic volume, they receive an optical lightness despite the heaviness and hardness of the material, which seem to make them independent of the laws of gravity.<ref>[http://welt-der-form.net/Morsbroich/Cordone-Movimento_elicoidale-1-auto.html Cordone Elicoidale] Accessed on February 14, 2019</ref> According to Vitt, Cordone “succeeds in dematerializing the mass of these sculptures to a high degree.”<ref name=Vitt /> As the ''Elicoidali'' are rolled, their edges form a continuous helicoid, or spiral, on the surface, whereby the three-dimensional sculptures appear projected on a plane.


[[File:Cordone ARAG.jpg|thumb|''Movimento Ellissoidale'' (2001) in front of the [[ARAG-Tower]] in Düsseldorf]]
[[File:Cordone ARAG.jpg|thumb|''Movimento Ellissoidale'' (2001) in front of the [[ARAG-Tower]] in Düsseldorf]]

[[File:Cordone Atelier.jpg|thumb|Studio Roberto Cordone, Cologne]]


== Sculpture and Dance ==
== Sculpture and Dance ==
In the 1993 German television production ''Sculpture and Dance: Heavy Metal and Light Steps'', the ''Elicoidali'' and the ''Perpendicolari'' were brought together on the stage with a professional ballet company.<ref> Film: ''Tanz und Skulptur: Schweres Metall und leichte Schritte“. 1993.(in German). Shown on [[Arte]]: 22.11.1993, [[Westdeutscher Rundfunk|WDR]]: 4.11.1994. </ref> The dancers moved and intertwined themselves with these sculptures. The art historian Eduard Trier characterized Cordone’s work as “sculptural beings.” <ref name=Vitt /> The ''Elicoidali'' and the ''Perpendicolari'' acted as equal ballet figures on stage and merged with the artistic movement of ballet dancers to form a total work of art. In the course of the development of the sculptural ballets, Cordone also created photographic canvases of the interaction of the dancers and the sculptures.<ref> Roberto Cordone, ''Movimenti'', [[Museum Morsbroich]], [[Leverkusen]], 1995. </ref>
In the 1993 German television production ''Sculpture and Dance: Heavy Metal and Light Steps'', the ''Elicoidali'' and the ''Perpendicolari'' were brought together on the stage with a professional ballet company.<ref>Film: ''Tanz und Skulptur: Schweres Metall und leichte Schritte“. 1993.(in German). Shown on [[Arte]]: 22.11.1993, [[Westdeutscher Rundfunk|WDR]]: 4.11.1994.</ref> The dancers moved and intertwined themselves with these sculptures. The art historian Eduard Trier characterized Cordone's work as “sculptural beings.”<ref name=Vitt /> The ''Elicoidali'' and the ''Perpendicolari'' acted as equal ballet figures on stage and merged with the artistic movement of ballet dancers to form a total work of art. In the course of the development of the sculptural ballets, Cordone also created photographic canvases of the interaction of the dancers and the sculptures.<ref>Roberto Cordone, ''Movimenti'', [[Museum Morsbroich]], [[Leverkusen]], 1995.</ref>
[[File:Cordone Tanz.jpg|thumb|Cordone Sculpture and Dance]]
[[File:Cordone Tanz.jpg|thumb|Cordone Sculpture and Dance]]


== Ellissoidale ==
== Ellissoidale ==
In 2001, Cordone designed a large-scale, outdoor monumental sculpture ''Movimento Ellissoidale'', which stands in shallow water in front of the [[Arag-Tower|ARAG Tower]] in [[Düsseldorf]].<ref> [https://www.lokalkompass.de/duesseldorf/c-kultur/unterwegs-in-duesseldorf-das-hochhaus-im-gruenen_a790553#gallery=default&pid=916518 Cordone at the ARAG Tower] Accessed on May 19, 2019. </ref> Made from an alloy of aluminum and titanium, its high sail-like vertical form creates a five-ton wind-kinetic sculpture. An offset center of gravity, with an "inner pivot and self-aligning bearings, as used in shafts driven by a ship’s propeller, allows the large sculpture to maneuver freely like a sailing ship.” <ref name=GK> Gerhard Kolberg: Movimento Ellissoidale. Roberto Cordone. Düsseldorf, 2001, {{ISBN|3-00-008324-3}}. </ref> Whether large gusts or gentle winds, the sculpture nautically corrects “in the wind." <ref name=GK />
In 2001, Cordone designed a large-scale, outdoor monumental sculpture ''Movimento Ellissoidale'', which stands in shallow water in front of the [[Arag-Tower|ARAG Tower]] in [[Düsseldorf]].<ref>[https://www.lokalkompass.de/duesseldorf/c-kultur/unterwegs-in-duesseldorf-das-hochhaus-im-gruenen_a790553#gallery=default&pid=916518 Cordone at the ARAG Tower] Accessed on May 19, 2019.</ref> Made from an alloy of aluminum and titanium, its high sail-like vertical form creates a five-ton wind-kinetic sculpture. An offset center of gravity, with an "inner pivot and self-aligning bearings, as used in shafts driven by a ship’s propeller, allows the large sculpture to maneuver freely like a sailing ship.”<ref name=GK>Gerhard Kolberg: Movimento Ellissoidale. Roberto Cordone. Düsseldorf, 2001, {{ISBN|3-00-008324-3}}.</ref> Whether large gusts or gentle winds, the sculpture nautically corrects “in the wind."<ref name=GK />


== References ==
== References ==
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== External links ==
== External links ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vefpqqdDbYM “Interview with Achim Moeller],” [[Achim Moeller]], Moeller Fine Art, New York/Berlin, [[Art Cologne]] 2014, April 11, 2014. Video: K. Zupan-Rupp, F. Zachoval, VernissageTV. Starting at minute 4:45 (out of 5:48).
* [https://vimeo.com/529667651 "Bermel von Luxburg Gallery, Berlin, on Roberto Cordone, 2021"].
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vefpqqdDbYM “Interview with Achim Moeller],” [[Achim Moeller]], Moeller Fine Art, New York/Berlin, [[Art Cologne]] 2014, April 11, 2014. Video: K. Zupan-Rupp, F. Zachoval, VernissageTV. Starting at minute 4:45 (out of 5:48).

* [http://welt-der-form.net/Duesseldorf/Cordone-2001-Movimento_ellisoidale-8830.html SkulpTour Düsseldorf]
* [http://welt-der-form.net/Duesseldorf/Cordone-2001-Movimento_ellisoidale-8830.html SkulpTour Düsseldorf]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtAi3ESOYWg “Dance is Transformation, Part Two],” Galerie Schlichtenmaier, [[Stuttgart]], 2020, October 10, 2020. Starting at minute 5:53.
{{authority control}}
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQbyJVV3W8s “Dance is Transformation],” Horst Simschek, Galerie Schlichtenmaier, [[Stuttgart]], 2020, October 15, 2020. Starting at minute 2:20.

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cordone, Roberto}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cordone, Roberto}}
[[Category:1941 births]]
[[Category:1941 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:20th-century Italian sculptors]]
[[Category:20th-century Italian sculptors]]
[[Category:20th-century Italian male artists]]
[[Category:21st-century Italian sculptors]]
[[Category:21st-century Italian sculptors]]
[[Category:People from the Province of Imperia]]
[[Category:People from the Province of Imperia]]
[[Category:Italian expatriates in Germany]]
[[Category:Italian expatriates in Germany]]
[[Category:People from Cologne]]
[[Category:Artists from Cologne]]
[[Category:21st-century Italian male artists]]

Latest revision as of 19:32, 29 November 2023

Roberto Cordone (born 11 April 1941 in Vallecrosia, Liguria) is an Italian artist and sculptor. He has spent most of his career in Cologne, Germany. His signature work, the monumental sculpture, Movimento Ellissoidale (2001), made of aluminium alloy, stands in front of the ARAG-Tower in Düsseldorf, designed by Sir Norman Foster.

Roberto Cordone (2001)

Life

[edit]

Cordone received his artistic training from the painter Enzo Maiolino in Bordighera, Italy. In 1960, he emigrated to Cologne, Germany and increasingly shifted his focus to sculpture. Since 1966, he has participated in solo and group exhibitions in German and Italian museums and galleries. His commissions for large-scale works are found in many public places in Germany. In 1969, he received the German award ars viva. Cordone has a large number of sculptures in museums, including the Museum Ludwig in Cologne and Museum Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf, and the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Rome. Cordone is an elected member of the Accademia Tiberina in Rome. Today, he lives with his wife in Cologne, Germany.

Roberto Cordone at work on Movimento Ellissoidale (2001)

Work

[edit]

Cordone's work consists mostly of abstract sculptures of bronze, stainless steel, and alloys of titanium and aluminum. His early works are linked to the tradition of the classical modernism of the 20th century, which deemphasizes representation in favor of the abstract. Cordone seeks new content in abstract sculptures. The art historian Uta Gerlach-Laxner stated that his work evolved to often suggest associations with the sensory-organic world, forming a "symbiosis of the organically grown and the technically constructed."[1] According to the art historian Hans Ost, Cordone succeeds in creating “a higher nature,” introducing the viewer to a “new world of visual and spiritual experience.”[2]

Roberto Cordone Perpendicolari in his studio in Cologne

A distinctive characteristic of many of his sculptures flows from his specific use of hard-to-cast alloys and intense workmanship with these materials to reflect light. His technique, which required him to expand his expertise in metalworking, grew from the realization that “light-reflections could be used to substitute for many of the lines and contours” in a sculpture.[3]

Perpendicolari

[edit]

His Perpendicolari sculptures, first developed in the middle of the 1960s, were a "step from the figurative to the abstract, and at the same time, a breakthrough to artistic autonomy."[1] The life-size Perpendicolari works are slender metal sculptures of vertical axiality, free of a pedestal and imperceptibly attached to the ceiling by thin wires. They only lightly touch the ground and can be subtly twisted by the slightest impact so that they seem to float. Movement and apparent weightlessness become the characteristic of Cordone's artistic expression. “In spite of what are enormous weights,” according to the German art critic Walter Vitt, Cordone achieves a property that might be described as “making light of the heavy.”[4] With their form related to "human dimensions and proportions," according to Ost, "the Perpendiculari seem to float in space, weightless like a dancer, propelling himself into the air.”[2]

Vertikali

[edit]

The Vertikali sculptures were conceived for the outdoors, anchored to the earth, often in correspondence with the surrounding architecture.[5] They are stainless steel sculptures, larger than life, built by using segments of cylinders and spheres welded together in symmetrical or asymmetrical relationships.

[3] Because of their highly polished, reflective metal surfaces, these sculptures reflect the surrounding environment and architecture and are in a constant process of change.[3]

Componibili

[edit]

The original sculptures Componibili of 1972 and 1973 were made from a special industrial polyurethane and based on the tetrahedral model of the carbon atom. They could be set up in a variety of ways, becoming ever new forms. A further development, which originated from the middle element of the Componibili, is the sculpture Cyclopentan (1973). It is now in the Bayer collection and was exhibited in 2013 in the Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin.[6]

Perpendicolare Elicoidale (1988) at Art Cologne, 2014

These sculptures recently celebrated their 50th anniversary with an exhibition in Cologne.[1].

Velari

[edit]

The Velari group of sculptures evolved from the Perpendicolari sculptures. The Velari are also designed axially with no pedestal but with less volume and leaned against a wall, moved in space, or positioned as desired. Their shape is reminiscent of the wave-like movement of sails in the wind.

Elicoidali

[edit]

The Elicoidali sculptures are the "logical result of long artistic work” from the single vertical axial Perpendiculari to sculptures able to freely move in a room, changing their axis as they move.[2] No longer suspended or standing in a fixed place, the Elicoidali represent a "new design principle and a remarkable breadth of variation" in the inventory of forms.[1] They appear to constantly change shape as they move. By reducing their plastic volume, they receive an optical lightness despite the heaviness and hardness of the material, which seem to make them independent of the laws of gravity.[7] According to Vitt, Cordone “succeeds in dematerializing the mass of these sculptures to a high degree.”[4] As the Elicoidali are rolled, their edges form a continuous helicoid, or spiral, on the surface, whereby the three-dimensional sculptures appear projected on a plane.

Movimento Ellissoidale (2001) in front of the ARAG-Tower in Düsseldorf

Sculpture and Dance

[edit]

In the 1993 German television production Sculpture and Dance: Heavy Metal and Light Steps, the Elicoidali and the Perpendicolari were brought together on the stage with a professional ballet company.[8] The dancers moved and intertwined themselves with these sculptures. The art historian Eduard Trier characterized Cordone's work as “sculptural beings.”[4] The Elicoidali and the Perpendicolari acted as equal ballet figures on stage and merged with the artistic movement of ballet dancers to form a total work of art. In the course of the development of the sculptural ballets, Cordone also created photographic canvases of the interaction of the dancers and the sculptures.[9]

Cordone Sculpture and Dance

Ellissoidale

[edit]

In 2001, Cordone designed a large-scale, outdoor monumental sculpture Movimento Ellissoidale, which stands in shallow water in front of the ARAG Tower in Düsseldorf.[10] Made from an alloy of aluminum and titanium, its high sail-like vertical form creates a five-ton wind-kinetic sculpture. An offset center of gravity, with an "inner pivot and self-aligning bearings, as used in shafts driven by a ship’s propeller, allows the large sculpture to maneuver freely like a sailing ship.”[11] Whether large gusts or gentle winds, the sculpture nautically corrects “in the wind."[11]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Uta Gerlach-Laxner. Roberto Cordone, Galerie Schlichtenmaier. Schloss Dätzingen, 2011. Translated from German. Link to exhibit catalogue
  2. ^ a b c Hans Ost. Roberto Cordone, Galerie Apicella. Cologne 1990.
  3. ^ a b c Evelyn Weiss, “Interview with Roberto Cordone,” in Roberto Cordone, Perpendicolari—Verticalli Arbeiten von 1967-1975, Deutsches Klingenmuseum Solingen, 26.10-7.12.1975. In English.
  4. ^ a b c Walter Vitt, Making Light of the Heavy, in Roberto Cordone, Movimenti, Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, 1995.
  5. ^ Cordone Vertikali Accessed February 15, 2019.
  6. ^ Bayer exhibit Exhibit Von Beckmann bis Warhol in the Gropius-Bau. Photo 11 in photo gallery. Accessed February 14, 2019.
  7. ^ Cordone Elicoidale Accessed on February 14, 2019
  8. ^ Film: Tanz und Skulptur: Schweres Metall und leichte Schritte“. 1993.(in German). Shown on Arte: 22.11.1993, WDR: 4.11.1994.
  9. ^ Roberto Cordone, Movimenti, Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, 1995.
  10. ^ Cordone at the ARAG Tower Accessed on May 19, 2019.
  11. ^ a b Gerhard Kolberg: Movimento Ellissoidale. Roberto Cordone. Düsseldorf, 2001, ISBN 3-00-008324-3.
[edit]