IN REVIEW | ALBUQUERQUE
For connoisseurs of blue chickens
Italian postwar ceramic show in Old Town, compact but insightful
New Mexico is world-renowned for its ceramics, from ancestral lineages of Pueblo pottery-making to Mexican and Spanish colonial traditions. Because our local ceramic heritage is so rich, we have fewer opportunities to see great ceramic design from other parts of the world. 鈥淚talia: Postwar Ceramics鈥 at The Sagrada by Clay + Coda, a vintage design gallery in Old Town, provides a compact but insightful overview of Italian ceramics made between 1955 and 1975. It鈥檚 a must-see for anyone with an interest in Italian design or mid-century modern design in general.
Some pieces in the show were designed by Aldo Londi, including several from the Rimini Blu collection he created for Tuscan manufacturer Bitossi, starting in 1955. Known for their distinctive turquoise-ultramarine glazes and imprinted textures, some of the most coveted Rimini Blu pieces are the folk art-inspired animal sculptures. Clay + Coda has one of Londi's blue chickens on offer for $350 鈥 a fair price for an iconic design object. In addition to the ceramics, you can pick up a brief biography of the ceramicist written by his son, Luca Londi, which I read with great interest. He had a fascinating life.
In 1932, Aldo Londi was drafted into the Italian army and sent to Eritrea, which served as the launching ground for Benito Mussolini鈥檚 invasion of Ethiopia. Londi never held any strong political beliefs, it seems, apart from liking people from all cultures and not wanting to fight them. So, he was grateful that during all his years of military service, he never had to fire 鈥渁 single round of ammunition.鈥 Rather, he spent his war years sketching, painting and making ceramic art wherever he was stationed. When he was captured by the British and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in South Africa, he managed to befriend his jailers, who gave him access to clay, pigments, brushes and kilns. At one point, he built a six-meter-tall reinforced concrete sculpture in the middle of the camp. When he returned to Italy after the war, he was neither traumatized or demoralized, as many soldiers were, but simply revved up about the artistic ideas he鈥檇 been developing during his imprisonment.
Londi鈥檚 raw, modern forms took inspiration from African and Etruscan art, as well as cubism and art brut. But his classically-trained assistants didn鈥檛 always get it. As his son wrote, 鈥淭here was no end to fights with the Raphaelesque artists, the ones who painted even the tiniest details with their fine-tipped paintbrushes.鈥
Clay + Coda pairs vintage Londi pieces with a selection of Venetian glassworks from the same postwar period, including a sensual clam shell paperweight by Murano maestro Archimede Seguso.
Also on display are recent Londi knock-offs from a big-box store that imitate his all-over textures. The pottery is proof of the enduring popularity of Londi鈥檚 designs but also their continued commercial debasement. Londi鈥檚 designs may have been mass-produced, too, but they were still made with care and pride, using hand-applied sgraffito techniques, whereas the rip-offs, pumped out of molds, are cheap, soulless replicas. When viewed alongside the originals, there鈥檚 simply no comparison.
Logan Royce Beitmen is an arts writer for the sa国际传媒官网网页入口. He covers visual art, music, fashion, theater and more. Reach him at lbeitmen@abqjournal.com or on Instagram at .