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Amanita

Manna Rain

Rita Ackermann

Fondazione Iris
Via Belvedere, 19, 01030 Bassano in Teverina VT
June 10, 2024 – July 31, 2024
Open by appointment: iris@fondazioneiris.com

ACKE.13.2024
Rita Ackermann, Mouchette in Hollywood, 2024, Oil, acrylic and crayon on canvas, 110 x 108 in, 279.4 x 274.3 cm
ACKE.12.2024
Rita Ackermann, Transparent Horizon Reigns, 2024, Oil and crayon on canvas, 92 x 80 1/2 x 1 1/2 in, 233.7 x 204.5 x 3.8 cm (unframed) 93 1/8 x 81 5/8 x 2 5/8 in, 236.5 x 207.3 x 6.7 cm (framed)
ACKE.12.2024
ACKE/14.2024
Rita Ackermann, The Loss of Innocence, 2024, Oil on paper, 26 x 40 in, 66 x 101.6 cm (unframed) 29 1/2 x 43 1/2 x 1 7/8 in, 74.8 x 110.5 x 4.8 cm (framed)
ACKE.3.2024
Rita Ackermann, Sound of the Wind, 2024, Oil on paper, 60 1/2 x 40 in, 153.7 x 101.6 cm (unframed) 64 3/8 x 44 1/8 x 1 1/2 in, 163.5 x 112.1 x 3.8 cm (framed)
ACKE.7.2024
Rita Ackermann, Bronze Tears, 2024, Oil and printed paper on hard paper, 60 1/4 x 40 1/4 in, 153 x 102.2 cm (unframed) 62 7/8 x 42 5/8 x 2 in, 159.7 x 108.3 x 5.1 cm (framed)
ACKE.11.2024
Rita Ackermann, Manna Rain, 2024, Oil and crayon on canvas, 92 x 83 x 1 1/2 in 233.7 x 210.8 x 3.8 cm (unframed) 93 1/8 x 84 x 1/8 x 2 5/8 236.5 x 213.7 x 6.7 cm (framed)
ACKE.11.5.2024
ACKE.5.2024
Rita Ackermann, Manna Rain Study, 2024, Oil and crayon on paper, 22 1/2 x 30 x 22 in, 57.2 x 76.2 x 55.9 cm (unframed) 31 x 38 3/8 x 1 3/4 in, 78.7 x 97.5 x 4.3 cm (framed)
ACKE.9.2024
Rita Ackermann, Evening Quail, 2024, Acrylic, oil, printed paper and graphite on hard paper, 60 1/4 x 40 1/4 in, 153 x 102.2 cm (unframed) 62 7/8 x 42 5/8 x 2 in, 159.7 x 108.3 x 5.1 cm (framed)
ACKE.9.2024
Rita Ackermann, Flickers Captured, 2024, Oil and crayon on paper, 60 1/2 x 40 in, 153.7 x 101.6 cm (unframed) 64 3/8 x 44 1/8 x 1 1/2 in, 163.5 x 112.1 x 3.8 cm (framed)
ACKE.16.2024
Rita Ackermann, Ubiquitous (Outside of Time and Space), 2024, Acrylic and soft pastel, 9.8 x 32.8 ft, 3 x 10 m
Photo: Daniel Turner

Overview

Amanita presents Manna Rain, a solo exhibition at Fondazione Iris of new work by Rita Ackermann, including a suite of paintings and works on paper, a film, and a site specific mural. The works in this exhibition are a culmination of Ackermann’s long standing engagement with Twombly’s oeuvre and brush upon eternal themes of nature, divinity, mythology, and poetry. We would like to thank Hauser & Wirth for their support in the realization of this exhibition.

Fondazione Iris opened in 2023 after a two year renovation project of the historic palazzo. Acquired in 1975, the building underwent a transformation in collaboration with Giorgio Franchetti under Cy Twombly’s guidance. Cy Twombly found solace in Bassano, immersing himself in the atavistic landscape of Tuscia, central Italy, the ancient homeland of the Etruscans. The thick tuff stone endemic to the area provided natural insulation, allowing Twombly to work in temperate conditions during the humid Italian summers. Fondazione Iris serves as a physical testament to the Twombly family’s commitment to preserving artistic heritage and nurturing creative endeavors. The foundation will welcome artists, scholars, and visitors, functioning as both an exhibition and performance space as well as a center for scholarly research. The foundation is also a custodian for Cy Twombly’s extensive library, providing a resource for scholars interested in engaging with Twombly’s collection of books and source materials.

For press inquiries, email: Tasha Saravia (ts@vidoun.com); Alexander Galan (ag@vidoun.com)



Dr. Pamela Kort on Rita Ackermann’s “Manna Rain”

“The nature that places the mask of the visible over the invisible, is only an appearance corrected by a transparence.” – Victor Hugo

RAIN
It begins with a downpour, a birch switch of water, pelting a darkening landscape. It goes on unendingly until there comes an interim in which silence reigns. It is then that the presence of a different kind of cruelty slowly becomes manifest – a world bereft of grace and compassion. Entrapped there, a young girl can no longer distinguish between the tears of anguish streaming from her eyes, and the rivulets of rain dripping from her tattered dress. Crouched under a tree, she hugs her knees tightly, waiting for the squall’s retreat. But tempests are as indifferent to the constraints of linear time as the forms rained down upon a canvas by a painter. Patiently the girl waits while the ground goes muddy gray. Only with the sun’s first rays, does a miracle reveal itself to her as though through a stroke of erasure. Gone are the puddles of sludge. In their place this innocent now finds an abundant and glimmering dew, cloaking everything before her.

FREEZE-FRAME
In these new paintings and drawings there is a sense of absence. Parts of bodies – arms and legs – stand for something once whole, reduced to fragments. With every movement of the eye from left to right form is further wiped away. Ellipsis pervades. Go ‘in’ these paintings seem to say. Only then might you come ‘out’ with a shred of knowledge that might make sense of a debased world. Forget casting about for likenesses. If “God contains all forms” as Dionysus the Areopagite maintained, then truth lies in dissemblance. Arrest time to go beyond it. Consider the imperceptible gap between two images that have materialized on a transparent strip of film. It is in that liminal space that the invisible begins to dance, if only for a split-second.

VEIL
The dust of chalk is akin to a shroud of paint. Both bestow an element of indeterminacy upon something supposedly fixed. Suddenly forms flicker; there is also a subtle sensation of circling. A body otherwise absent rolls down a hill, enwrapped in veil-like dress on her way to a distant place. The divine is near, something is passing by outside of time and space. It leaves an almost indiscernible trace. All we can perceive though is a certain mistiness, one that hints at release and the possibility of self-fulfillment as enduring freedom.



Rita Ackermann (b. 1968, Budapest, Hungary) currently lives and works in New York. Ackermann’s recent solo exhibitions include: Splits, Hauser & Wirth New York, 22nd Street (2024); Splits: Printing | Painting, Hauser & Wirth New York, 18th Street (2024); Hidden, MASI Lugano, Switzerland (2023); Vertical Vanish, Hauser & Wirth Downtown Los Angeles (2023); Mama ‘19, Hauser & Wirth New York, 22nd Street (2020); Brother Sister, Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Switzerland (2019); Movements as Monuments, La Triennale di Milano, Italy (2018); Turning Air Blue, Hauser & Wirth Somerset, England (2017); KLINE RAPE, Hauser & Wirth New York, 22nd Street (2016); The Aesthetic of Disappearance, Malmö Konsthall, Malmo, Sweden (2016); Chalkboard Paintings, Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Switzerland (2015); MEDITATION ON VIOLENCE-HAIR WASH, Sammlung Friedrichshof, Burgenland, Austria and Sammlung Friedrichshof Stadtraum, Vienna, Austria (2014); Negative Muscle, Hauser & Wirth New York, 69th Street (2013); Fire by Days, Hauser & Wirth London, Piccadilly (2012); the Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami FL (2012); Bakos, Ludwig Museum, Budapest, Hungary (2011); and Rita Ackermann and Harmony Korine: ShadowFux, Swiss Institute, New York NY (2010).

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Press

Financial Times: Artist Rita Ackermann checks into Cy Twombly’s retreat

Artribune: La mostra di Rita Ackermann a Palazzo Twombly nella Tuscia

Exibart: La pioggia e il velo, Rita Ackermann e Cy Twombly in dialogo alla Fondazione Iris