Photographer's Note
This is a part of the the concrete art of the former town of Gibellina.
As I said before a truly odd experience.
Take also a look at the Workshop
Italian artist Alberto Burri is known for a series of works titled Cretti, monochrome pieces composed of paste left to dry and crack eventually revealing fissures. These fissures are the focus of the work, illustrating the process and the artist's minimal involvement. Burri is a guide toward an unknown end as opposed to the general attitude towards artists as realizing an ideal vision. This self-reference relates the Cretti series to paintings by artists like Jackson Pollock's drip series, which reveal their means of production, while lacking figural relationships. The Cretto, in Gibellina, Sicily, resembles his Cretti series, though the former, a monumental work, exists on a deeper level, binding intimately to a time and place.
In January 1968, the same period Burri was working on the Cretti, an earthquake shook the western edge of Sicily in the Belice river valley. Gibellina was among twelve towns completely destroyed, though rebuilding happened differently here than in other towns. Instead of building atop the ruins of the old town the Gibellina was built approximately 20 km away, near a train line and highway. In 1981 Burri visited Gibellina, proposing the massive Cretto over the ruins of the old town.
Similar to the Cretti's fissures the streets of the old town become the cracks of this new work. The concrete masses solidify a moment in time when the old town existed, though the integration of the old building's rubble into the concrete reminds one of the earthquakes effects. Moving through the sloping site the visitor's gaze is slightly above the slanted planes of concrete that contain both the remains of the containers but also the contained: personal effects of an exiled population. Here we realize the Cretto's superiority over the Cretti; the latter exists as a two-dimensional piece to be looked at while the former is both an object in the landscape and a spatial experience, occupied irrespective of its overall form.
The Cretto's existence is best summed up by the architects Cristina Diaz Moreno and Efren Garcia Grinda:
The Cretto is above all an act of negotiation with the place and memory, which Burri gives to an alienated, uprooted population; by identifying the form of a process of restructuring of matter - in some ways similar to what happened at Gibellina - and the form of the destroyed town, he creates a mechanism to link events, configuration and time.
Critiques | Translate
jonathan_hart
(21262) 2008-11-06 13:45
never seen such a scene ! interesting post, and excellent composition, human presence giving scale, and the monumental artwork in BG
TFS, regards
jc
Clementi
(52479) 2008-11-06 15:24
Ciao Anders,
I have seen with pleasure the photos of your journey in Italy. those on gibellina, (wait for the other ones) must say that it is a wonderful place where the artists' creativity see, and where a photographer as good as you certainly draw magnificent starting points.
compliments
Giorgio
BennyV
(11807) 2008-11-07 0:29
Dag Anders,
Impressive, your previous shot also attracted my attention, but without seeing the whole, it didn't say so much. This one is a real stunner, I'll have to go back to your previous shot now...
Benny
saxo042
(27764) 2008-11-07 4:04
Hej Anders,
A very graphical pattern here, but I guess that is in your profession to see this... The included persons give a good estimation of the size of this very impressive piece of art!
Hälsningar
Gunnar
Aline_N
(3171) 2008-11-07 5:51
What a place, what a work ! Amazing.
Thank you for the way you photographied it, and thank you for your note.
ellelloo
(6544) 2008-11-07 12:21
Hejsan Anders,
A very special and interesting artwork and your photo is really attractive. A great POV and composition, where you have included the other visitors to create the sense of scale. A view from this angle shows the cracks in diagonals in an interesting "puzzle". Thanks for the good note too.
Hälsningar,
Lasse
fanni
(13318) 2008-11-07 14:00
Hej Anders,
excellent POV showing the size of the artwork. Including people in the photo is an excellent idea: first, we can compare the sizes and, second, the people make the image lively :) The green grass in the FG is a very big plus, too :)
Interesting note as well.
Best regards,
Elena
scroller
(3249) 2008-11-07 15:50
Hej igen!
One must say that as an artist this must be the heaven. Imagine to have whole this are to just create...And what beauty it makes... Strange that this not has been documentated before here on TE.
Ha det
/Stefan
holmertz
(20560) 2008-11-08 12:22
Hej Anders,
A superbly composed and cropped picture. A fascinating and strange place, and what's more fascinating is that I didn't have an idea that it existed.
Hälsningar,
Gert
Cretense
(68586) 2008-11-10 5:35
Hi Anders!
Wow, is this for real??? Unbelievable, one of the craziest and most impressive things I have ever seen! Your photo is exceptional, fantastic framing and composition, great light managment! Congratulations!
Hercules
Leonie
(8799) 2008-11-28 3:30
Hi Anders,
Interesting photo! I had never seen photos of this. Some artists have really crazy ideas! On your photo it looks somewhat cool also because you included the people to give it a scale, but I think in reality it's not so great...
Cheers, Léonie
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Anders Mohlin (molla)
(7125) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2008-10-31
- Categories: Architecture, Artwork, Ruins
- Photo Version: Original Version, Workshop
- Theme(s): hoooo!!!!! [view contributor(s)]
- Date Submitted: 2008-11-06 11:19
Discussions
- To scroller: det märkliga. (1)
by molla, last updated 2008-11-08 01:02









