Patrizia Cavalli
Il Sospetto del Paradiso
30.5 – 25.8.2024
Macro – Museum of Contemporary Art of Rome
Il sospetto del paradiso (The Suspicion of Paradise) is the first exhibition dedicated by a museum to the poet Patrizia Cavalli (Todi, 1947 – Rome, 2022), a pivotal figure in Italian poetry in the second half of the 20th century, whose Roman house was an important meeting place for the capital’s cultural milieu.
Through more than 200 photographs by Lorenzo Castore, the exhibition project showcases the house in Via del Biscione near Campo de’ Fiori, where Cavalli lived for almost 50 years. The photographs, both in color and black and white film, were taken within a week, two months after the poet’s death and shortly before the house was dismembered. These photographs document for the last time the uninhabited interiors in a sequence of shots that focus on objects, furniture, portraits, manuscripts, and works by artists, often friends, collected by Cavalli over time. Her domestic world is thus reconstructed through detailed pictures with textural quality.
A selection of typescripts and manuscripts show Cavalli’s use of a sophisticated poetry technique and an everyday vocabulary based on classical metrical structures that allow her to condense—with epigrammatic wittiness, reflective attitude, and irony—the mysteries of existence, leading the reader face to face with the poetical apparition.
The exhibition also presents the publishing projects in which Cavalli collaborated with visual artists or presented art-related writings. They are essays for exhibition catalogs, poems or prose dedicated to artists or used by them as evocations, limited editions that take shape by juxtaposing words and artworks. They are all publications resulting from encounters and friendships.
The back wall shows the poet’s process of annotating, composing, fine-tuning, and publishing her poems, which alternates between manuscript and typescript form, conveying the metrical accuracy, stylistic and musical research concerning also short and simple poems.
At last, in Gianni Barcelloni’s video from the series Il navigatore. Ritratti di scrittori, Patrizia Cavalli reads her poems while walking through her house, and together with the director, she reflects on life, boredom, love, death, happiness, and unhappiness. In the middle of the exhibition room, a display case randomly presents 105 paper clippings with shopping lists and annotated thoughts of the poet.
Acknowledgments: Matteo Alessandri, Archivio Giacinto Cerone, Archivio Marilù Eustachio, Eugenio e Martina Barcelloni, Biblioteca Teatrale Molinari – La bottega dello sguardo, Valentina Bonomo arte contemporanea, Giulia Carpinelli, Rosaria Carpinelli, Casa Museo Boschi di Stefano, Alberto Casiraghi, Marina Colonna, Emanuele Dattilo, Gianni Dessì, Davide Di Gianni, Isabella Ducrot, Gamec, Lorenzo Giusti, Maro Gorky, Daniela Lancioni, Paola Lecca, Litografia Bulla, Sarah Long, Francesca Marciano, Salvatore Mazza, Galleria Giorgio Persano, Giampaolo Prearo, Sovrintendenza Capitolina, CRDAV – Centro Ricerca e Documentazion Arti Visive, Orsina Sforza, Matthew Spender, Enzo Eric Toccaceli, Pietro Vannicelli
Curator: Luca Lo Pinto
Curatorial Coordinator: Matteo Binci
Research: Eloisa Magiera
Production Coordinator: Marco Lo Giudice
Production Assistant: Giulia Corti
Head of Press Office and Communication: Maddalena Bonicelli
Digital Content Editor: Nicoletta Graziano
Social Media Manager: Elena Fortunati
Web Manager / Digital Marketing: Andrea Pergola
Graphic Designer: Marco Campardo, Olivia Lynk
Art Handlers: Nomade Arte, Fabio Pennacchia, Carlo Giannone, Matteo Pompili