Robert Indiana, The Electric Eat, 1964/2007

“Arts & Foods” exhibition at the Triennale di Milano

The exhibition Arts & Foods. Rituals since 1851, running from April 9 to November 1, 2015, is the first section of the EXPO 2015 to open, as well as the only thematic area of the Expo located in the center of Milan.

The exhibition, inspired by the main theme of the EXPO, “Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life”, is aimed to investigate the manifold relationship between food, its rituals and different means of artistic expression over a 160 years long period -from 1851, the year of the first World Exposition in London, to present day.

Arts & Foods extends on surface of 7,000 square meters inside a Milan cultural landmark, the palace of the Triennale, and also includes an open-air section, located into the Triennale’s garden.

The garden, foreground: Paul McCarthy, Daddies Tomato Ketchup Inflatable, 2007

Exhibition concept and layout

The exhibition, which combines two different points of view – one chronological and one thematic – is a complex narration presenting various spaces where food is prepared and consumed, artifacts and utensils which the indoor and outdoor rituals of eating are based on, artworks, architectures, films and graphics.

Arts & Foods is divided into three parts, each housed in a different gallery.

From 1851 to the post-war era

The first section, located at the ground floor inside the “Curva” gallery, is a journey from the mid-19th century first World Exposition in London up to the post-war era, based on a vast set of items related to food and nutrition: exceptional works of art, from the 19th century figurative painting to the early-20th century abstract movements; utensils, tableware, cooking books; applied artworks, reconstructions of “typical” domestic and retail spaces, as well as architectures – including projects by Rietveld, Le Corbusier and Jean Prouvé.

A reconstruction of a Milan early-20th century cafe

Dining room of “Casa Cimino” by Gerardo Dottori, early 1930s

An early-20th century butcher shop

A display case with works by Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp

American kitchens and Lester Beall’s AD for the Rural Electrification Administration, late 1930s

Pavoni “Concorso” , coffee machine by Bruno Munari and Enzo Mari, 1956

Le Corbusier: kitchen unit type 1 for the “Unité d’habitation” in Marseille, 1955

Jean Prouvé: “La maison des jours meilleurs”, 1956

From the 1950s to the 1970s

The second part of “Arts & Foods”, housed in the “Aulenti” Gallery, depicts the period from the 1950s to the 1970s. This section presents all the hopes and contradictions of a period that embodied an ideal of optimism and innovation, but eventually came to criticize the degeneration of that ideal.

On the one hand, in the years immediately following the end of the World War II, a confident belief in modernity introduced new materials for furniture, utensils and food containers, aimed to a domestic space which is more and more free from the conventions of the past; furthermore new typologies of space and new objects were created to support habits and trends related to the mass consumption of food.

On the other, many begin to criticize this social model, and especially its degeneration into consumerism; like Warhol through his “serialized” food icons, the hippie culture and many desecrating filmmakers, such as Antonioni, Bunuel and Kubrick, to name a few.

Coca Cola vending machines

left: Tom Weisselmann, Still life; right: Andy Warhol, Campell’s soup cans

Jean Maneval, Maison Bulle, 1968

Joe Colombo, Roto-living unit, 1969

Verner Panton, furniture, Vitra, 1969

From the 1970s to present day

The present-time section of the exhibition is located within the “Cube” gallery at the first floor; here, works by contemporary artists express the complexity of what food represent these days. Visions depicting a, often crude, reality where the “the food question” involves politics, consumerism, over-production and globalization of food, only in theory available everywhere, are placed alongside critical proposals envisaging a more strict relationship between food and local communities.

Installation view, on the left: Mario Merz, Igloo, 1989

Left: Subodh Gupta, Ancestor cupboard, 2012. Right: Gregory Crewdson, untitled (Sunday roast), 2005.

Jannis Kounellis, Untitled, 2013

Vanessa Beecroft, VB52, 2003-2007

Frank O. Gehry, GFT fish, 1985-1986

Claes Oldenburg and Coosje Van Bruggen, left: installation, 1987; right: Leaning Fork with Meatball and Spaghetti III, 1994

Urs Fischer, Bread House, 2004-2006

Ron Mueck, Woman with shopping, 2013

Arts & Foods. Ritual since 1851

Triennale di Milano

9 April – 1 November, 2015

http://www.triennale.org/en/

All photos © Inexhibit, 2015