“Manifest Dissuasion: Operation 24 Pages” at Providence College Art Galleries and the poster of Umberto Mariani
Hunt-Cavanagh Gallery
December 5, 2018 – March 2, 2019
In 1973 the art historian and curator Enrico Crispolti commissioned eight artists — Umberto Mariani, Fernando De Filippi, Ugo Nespolo, Fabrizio Plessi, Sergio Sarri, Francesco Somaini, Valeriano Trubbiani and Emilio Vedova — to create posters that he installed in pre-existing advertising spaces in different cities across the Italian peninsula. The title for this disseminated and decentralized exhibition was Dissuasione Manifesta: Operazione 24 fogli (Manifest Dissuasion: Operation 24 pages), and, between 1973 and 1979, Crispolti installed it in Volterra, Macerata, Fano, Milan, Capo d’Orlando, Como, and Salerno. The goal was to infiltrate the preexisting system of commercial advertisement with art. The posters acted as agents in a covert curatorial operation, disrupting mechanisms of communication and objects of consumption. They also questioned the status of the art object, here displaced to a non-traditional art setting.
Operation 24 Pages at Providence College Art Galleries historicizes, contextualizes, and represents this subversive Italian intervention in an exhibition that includes original posters, urban installation photographs, and archival material. It reveals how the 1970s art posters drew connections and blurred boundaries between the art institutional sphere and the outside environment, the elite status of art and commodity culture, and the different registers of media communication and control.
Ultimately, Operation 24 Pages questions how the historic Italian exhibition framed the display of art as a liberated visual form of expression in the public realm that sought to infiltrate the experience of everyday urban life.
Many Cities, One Providence is an exhibition series offering Providence audiences idiosyncratic glimpses of innovative contemporary artists working in cities near and far. The series stems from Providence College Galleries’ interest in cultivating relationships with artists, scholars and arts communities from around the world in order to draw connections between the city of Providence and other urban contexts.