
Roberta Cotterli and Claudio Zorzi
a matter of time
Project Info
- đ Culterim|Backshop, BrunnenstraĂe 107, 13355, Berlin
- đ Christina-Marie LĂŒmen
- đ€ Roberta Cotterli and Claudio Zorzi
- đ Christina-Marie LĂŒmen
- đ Vlad Lucian
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Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian
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Claudio Zorzi, 'Transmutation (self-portrait n.11)', 2022. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Target', 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Target', detail, 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Target', detail, 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Claudio Zorzi, 'Roberta in front of the mirror', 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Pietas', 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Claudio Zorzi, 'Roberta wearing a kimono', 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Claudio Zorzi, 'Roberta (portrait n.8)', 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Trophy', 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Trophy', detail, 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian

Roberta Cotterli, 'Trophy', detail, 2023. Installation view, 'a matter of time', Culterim|Backshop, Berlin. 17 - 23 November 2023. Photography: Vlad Lucian
How do you look at a person who looks at you, not simply representing her?
The story of two artists. The idea of one developed in the otherâs painting, and these images influenced her sculptures in turn. The artist-couple Roberta Cotterli and Claudio Zorzi jointly present their work. Roberta Cotterliâs sculptures examine male representation in art history; Claudio Zorziâs portraits develop the idea of a modern Icon. Both artists investigate time in relation to process, art history, and moments spent with the other.
Roberta Cotterliâs Target (2023) shows the fragments of a male torso, its arms stretched upward and surrounded by arrows. The sculpture recalls depictions of Saint Sebastian: despite the violence of the situation, the posture is elegant and fierce. The resin arrows resemble alabaster; the light shines through the iridescent surface, and the red nuances of latex colouring in the armpit and on the elbows evoke the natural shades of the marble. The impression is firm and fragile at the same time. Cotterli has not worked with the male body before; until now, her practice focused on the female one: intimate references to a girlâs childhood intersect with clustered busts and limbs of older women. While former pieces show the same ambiguity between strength and fragility, a new element appears in her approach to the masculine: conquer. All of Cotterliâs sculptures in the exhibition cite stories in Christian iconography: Saint Sebastian, Saint John the Baptist or Holofernes. The male body is being wounded or
slaughtered. Trophy (2023) is a latex reproduction of a male head; again, the material reminds of the multiple shapes of polychrome marbles, and the posture references classical male portraiture or ancient death masks. The expression on the face is peaceful; the deep violet colour below the eyes evokes bruises or rotten meat: it is a gentle killing. The ambiguity between violence and caress is a constant characteristic of her production. The lightness of the material and the moulding through the artistâs hands suggest empathy as opposed to the brutal depiction.
In a similar vein, the woman in Roberta wearing a kimono (2023) looks firmly but gently upon the viewer. Her expression is questioning, her pose discrete and dignified. She resembles a Madonna; her body seems to be shining with a halo from the back; the brim of her kimono recalls the royal vestment. Claudio Zorziâs portraits approach their subjects from a perspective of constant change: the paintings of his partner Roberta are an ongoing series, without the intention to pin down; they aim to capture a process. Roberta, portrait no. 8 (2023) is bold, provocative, and cool. The prosaic surroundings and the sitter's relaxed pose remind you of the portraits by David Hockney or Alice Neel. A moment of observation and encounter, suspended tension between the model and the painter (viewer). The painting suggests a double emancipation: of the female sitter, who ceases to offer her body as an exchange good, and of the
male artist, who looks upon her without any sense of voyeurism. There is no male gaze, no female muse: these are exercises and homages. Roberta in front of the mirror (2023) shares the implication of a modern queen. The floral motif of the kimono brings to mind Henri Matisseâs Odalisques, female portraits in an orientalist style, while the short haircut and the mirror arrangement evoke paintings from New Objectivity. The portrait surface is coarse, and the image seems broken throughout. The artist works from photographs, applying numerous layers of paint in acrylic, oil, shellack and soil. During his slow process, Zorzi loses and recreates the figure again and again. His paintings relate
to the artist himself; they are a means of dialogue and self-discovery. As the most classical motif in art history, the portrait allows him to develop a dialogue with previous artists and to follow their ideas. Throughout the process, Zorzi discovers a part of him along with the sitter.
A pivotal role in his practice is assigned to the self-portrait: Transmutation, self-portrait no. 11 (2022) flashes on the Veil of Veronica, the imprint of Christâs face on a piece of cloth, taken on his way to Mount Calvary. A captured moment in time, both as proof and inquiry. While the Christian iconography and the motif of the head in Cotterliâs Trophy relate to it, her Pietas (2023) evidences the theme of the hands for both artists. Once again, the sculpture displays a violent act: a pair of extended hands pierced by long nails. The gesture is not tense, though, but simultaneously giving and receiving. The title refers to the Roman concept of âpietasâ, the virtue of perfectly fulfilling your duties towards the deities and your fellow human beings. Represented by a female goddess, it speaks of duty and devotion. The motif reminisces the hands of Jesus and other Christian martyrs; they evoke compassion rather than pain. A moment of male duty (from the martyr/model) and female devotion (from the goddess/artist). Likewise, the hands in Zorziâs portraits of Roberta are precisely executed and form a visual counterweight to the heads. Their
gesture expresses grace and a sense of (male) caring.
Despite their different media, the two artists share specific subjects and sources. Visual and material exploration combines with art historical references and art sociological considerations. The exhibition centres around the question of muse and model, suggesting a play between intimate representation vs. presented intimacy. The works tell stories of the sitter and the artist, and the two of them together; they shift between artistic investigation and expressions of care. Classical motifs are taken up and continued, roles are turned around. Old Masters and Christian iconography intersect with the Contemporary. a matter of time.
Christina-Marie LĂŒmen