Roberto Caruso, Michele Cesaratto, David Farcas,
Paolo Pretolani, Andrei Pokrowsky
OCCHIO FURBETTO
curated by Leonardo Devito
21 Novembre – 31 Gennaio 2025

Acappella is pleased to announce ‘Occhio Furbetto’, a group exhibition with works by Roberto Caruso, Michele Cesaratto, David Farcas, Andrei Pokrovskii, Paolo Pretolani, curated by Leonardo Devito. The exhibition brings together painters from different nationalities and backgrounds, united by a deep bond with the art history. A bond that sometimes shows itself openly, other times in a more nuanced way, but always through an intelligent and calibrated vision. This relationship between contemporary artists and masters of the past recalls Aby Warburg’s Mnemosyne, an atlas of comparative images that traces the history of references and constants of western art. For an attentive artist, certain images of the past can leave a specific imprint on his imagination and language, unconsciously building a sort of “constellation” of images, references, subjects and beloved details, towards which his painting continuously tends, directly or indirectly. This continuity with a given tradition, however, can reveal a certain fragility or raise questions that it is not wrong to ask. Contemporary art, in fact, has often created a clear break with the past and with what we might define as traditional art. By referring to something that has already been done, isn’t there a risk of being merely rhetorical or of appearing unoriginal? Is it still possible, today, to adhere in some way to an artistic tradition, whether it is close or remote? To answer this question, it is useful to consider what Salvatore Settis writes about traditions: “To approach artistic tradition we must take an opposite path, and etymology alone (tradition from the Latin traditio, which corresponds to the verb tradere, “to pass from hand to hand”) is not enough. We can instead resort to analogy with other uses of tradition, in an institutional sense or in cultural history. In the jargon of philologists, tradition is the mechanism of transmission of texts from one manuscript to another, with inevitable errors and variants. (…) Similarly, the image of Christ offering a scroll to Saint Peter, who can then pass it on to his successors, can be called traditio legis. These passages from hand to hand never imply full identity between the giver and the receiver; indeed, they exclude it (…) in which the need for continuity clashes with the inevitable discontinuity of practices, aspirations or projects, triggering crises or balances that are different each time. Tradition, in short, means inheriting something and taking possession of it to transform it into something else.” 1

- Leonardo Devito

1 S.Settis Incursioni, G. Feltrinelli Editore, Milano 2020, pp.12-13

Roberto Caruso (born in Lanciano, 1982); Michele Cesaratto (born in San Daniele del Friuli, 1998); David Farcas (born in Baia Mare, Romania, 1990); Andrei Pokrovskii (born in Moscow 1996); Paolo Pretolani (born in Assisi, 1991).

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Juliet

Art Viewer

ArtAround

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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Roberto Caruso Agnese non dorme (Af   ter Balthus) 2021 oil on canvas 
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 Roberto Caruso Agnese non dorme (Af   ter Balthus) 140 x 100 cm  
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 David Farcas, 2024 Untitled   80 X 70 cm oil on canvas 
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 David Farcas, 2024 Untitled   80 X 70 cm oil on canvas 
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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Michele Cesaratto Bebè, 2024   egg tempera on wood nut 21x29cm 
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 Paolo Pretolani Black Forest Gold,    2018, oil on jute 
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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Andrei Pokrovskii Sudovoy Jurnal    2024, acrylic and oil on panel 
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 David Farcas, 2024 Untitled    120 X 90 cm oil on canvas 
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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Occhio Furbetto installation view     
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 Paolo Pretolani Senza titolo, 2018   60 x 80 cm oil on cotton 
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 Andrei Pokrovskii Just what we love   2024, acrylic and oil on panel