Maurizio Cattelan – Venderequadri Skip to content
Maurizio Cattelan

Maurizio Cattelan

An artist of undisputed fame, who has sparked worldwide conversation about himself and his disconcerting, irritating, ironic, and unsettling works of art, Maurizio Cattelan, faced with this inestimable success, has repeatedly stated that he chose to be an artist because it's a profession where there's no need to work. The very theme of work, understood as the terror of personal failure in contemporary society and as a consequence of unemployment, is one of the topics the artist deals with in his works, for example when he represents the figure of the homeless man. Cattelan, therefore, alongside his playful, impertinent and irreverent streak towards the icons of art (he dismantles Joseph Beuys's credo on art as social regeneration; he mocks the readymade of Duchamp (destroys the artistic approach of Lucio Fontana) and the symbols of political power (his depictions of Kennedy, John Paul II, Hitler), Cattelan openly declares his reflection on the suffering, unhappiness, and dissatisfaction of the contemporary era, and on the condition of submission to the dogmas that oppress man today. It is Cattelan's melancholic side that emerges and is evident in Bidibidobidiboo (1995), a surreal self-portrait of the artist as a suicidal squirrel inside a miniaturized kitchen, a reproduction of the one he lived in as a child. The reference to childhood is also suggested by the fairy-tale title, which grotesquely connects the violence of the act of suicide with the power of magic formula, redeeming man from the condition of submission, towards an escape. In the second work presented in the exhibition (All, 2008), Cattelan addresses the theme of death in an even more overtly tragic way. Nine bodies lined up as in a grave are covered by a light sheet placed over the limbs perfectly outlined by the almost baroque workmanship of the Carrara marble. It is a reflection of the artist on various themes that have always recurred in the history of humanity, such as massacres, persecutions, unjustified deaths, the martyrs, who, like Cattelan's art, disorientate and disconcert the collective unconscious.
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