"Booth 3D15"
Convention & Exhibition Centre 1 Harbour Road Wan Chai Hong Kong, China
+41 58 206 2706 e-mail:This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

P +1 212 452 4646 F +1 212 452 4656 e-mail:This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Lucio Fontana : I TAGLI
Art Basel Hong Kong
Convention & Exhibition Centre 1 Harbour Road Wan Chai Hong Kong, China
+41 58 206 2706 e-mail:
LUXEMBOURG & DAYAN
64 EAST 77TH STREET NEW YORK NY 10075P +1 212 452 4646 F +1 212 452 4656 e-mail:
March 23 > 25, 2017
![]() Concetto spaziale, I Quanta 1959 Waterpaint on canvas 14¼ x 12 in. (36.2 x 30.5 cm) |
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attese 1960 Waterpaint on canvas 28¾ x 235/8 in. (73 x 60.1 cm) |
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attese 1960 Waterpaint on canvas 26 x 28¾ in. (66 x 73 cm) |
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attese 1964 Waterpaint on canvas 36¼ × 28 ¾ in. (92 × 73 cm) |
Booth 3D15
Luxembourg & Dayan is pleased to announce its inaugural participation in Art Basel Hong Kong with the exhibition
Lucio Fontana: I Tagli
, a grouping of the renowned Italian artist’s “slashed” paintings of the 1950s and 1960s. The gallery’s
presentation spotlights a pivotal moment in the career of Fontana (1899–1968), a 20th century titan whose paintings
and sculptures investigate the concept of space, suggesting the infinite beyond our worldly confines.
The precise slits in Lucio Fontana’s tagli —which he produced between 1958 and 1968—give the impression of unearthing a cosmic void from beneath the canvas. The tagli were central to Fontana’s inquiry into the intersection of tangible and conceptual space, the finite canvas and the potentially boundless expanse of three- and four-dimensions. Naming these bodies of work together Concetti spaziali , or “spatial concepts,” Fontana intended his violation of the painting’s surface to be a critical but ultimately constructive gesture—a “creative nothing.”¹ It enabled him to venture beyond pictorial formalism towards a dynamism that nonetheless gives the viewer, to use his words, “an impression of spatial calm, of cosmic rigor, of serenity in infinity.” ²
Since its founding, Luxembourg & Dayan has been deeply engaged in re-examining the artistic developments of postwar Europe, through exhibitions with artists ranging from Alberto Burri and Michelangelo Pistoletto, to Domenico Gnoli and Martial Raysse. The postwar years witnessed the intersection of sociopolitical revolutions and artistic re-evaluations of painting. Fontana was at the forefront of this upheaval. Along with such fellow Italian artists as Burri, Piero Manzoni, and Rodolfo Aricò, he pushed the two-dimensional canvas out of representational or purely expressive registers to rethink the role of painting both philosophically, and as a concrete object in lived space.
The presentation is accompanied by an illustrated publication featuring a text by art historian Pia Gottschaller.
About the Artist
Lucio Fontana was born on February 19, 1899, in Rosario de Santa Fé, Argentina, to an Italian father and an Argentinean mother. He lived in Milan from 1905 to 1922 and then moved back to Argentina, where he worked as a sculptor in his father's studio for several years before opening his own. In 1926, he participated in the first exhibition of Nexus (formed in 1907), a group of young Argentinean artists in Rosario de Santa Fé. On his return to Milan in 1928, Fontana enrolled at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, which he attended for two years.
The Galleria Il Milione, Milan, organized Fontana's first solo exhibition in 1930. In 1934, he joined the group of abstract Italian sculptors associated with the gallery. The artist traveled to Paris in 1935 and joined the group Abstraction-Création (Abstraction Creation, 1931–36). The same year, he developed his skills in ceramics in Albisola, Italy, and later at the Sèvres factory, near Paris. In 1939, he joined the Milanese anti- Fascist group Corrente (Current, 1938–43). It was during this period that he also intensified his lifelong collaboration with architects.
In 1940, Fontana moved to Buenos Aires. With some of his students he founded the Academia de Altamira in 1946, from which emerged the "Manifesto blanco" (“White manifesto,” 1946). He moved back to Milan in 1947 and in collaboration with a group of writers and philosophers signed the "Primo manifesto dello spazialismo" (“First manifesto of spatialism,” 1947). He would subsequently explore these new ideas with his Concetti spaziali ( Spatial concepts , 1949–68).
The year 1949 marked a turning point in Fontana's career; he concurrently created his first series of paintings in which he punctured the canvas with buchi (holes), and his first spatial environment—a combination of sculptures, fluorescent paintings, and black lights to be viewed in a darkened room. The latter work soon led him to employ neon tubing in ceiling decoration. In the early 1950s, he participated in Italian Art Informel exhibitions. During this decade, he explored working with various effects, such as slashing and perforating, in both painting and sculpture. The artist visited New York in 1961 during a show of his work at the Martha Jackson Gallery. In 1966, he designed opera sets and costumes for La Scala, Milan.
In the last year of his career, Fontana became increasingly interested in the staging of his work in the many exhibitions that honored him worldwide, as well as in the idea of purity achieved in his last white canvases. These concerns were prominent at the 1966 Venice Biennale, for which he designed the environment for his work, and at the 1968 Documenta, Kassel, West Germany. Fontana died on September 7, 1968, in Comabbio, Italy.
About Luxembourg & Dayan
Luxembourg & Dayan presents curated, museum-quality exhibitions of works by modern masters and contemporary artists in its spaces in New York and London. Since opening, the gallery has presented a number of critically-acclaimed exhibitions, ranging from historical presentations of artists, such as Alberto Giacometti, Alberto Burri, and Lucian Freud, to thematic survey exhibitions, which since 2011 have included Grisaille , Unpainted Paintings , Thick Paint , The Shaped Canvas, Revisited , and Wo r d B y Wo r d .
Media contact
Andrea Schwan, Andrea Schwan Inc.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , +1 917 371 5023
Gair Burton, Pickles PR,This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , +44 7402 784 470
Simone Woo, Jiang Hildebrandt Associates Ltd.,This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. , +852 9260 1455
2. L. Fontana, quoted in E. Crispolti, Lucio Fontana: Catalogo ragionato di sculture, dipinti, ambientazioni , Vol. I, Milan: Skira, 2006, p. 105.
The precise slits in Lucio Fontana’s tagli —which he produced between 1958 and 1968—give the impression of unearthing a cosmic void from beneath the canvas. The tagli were central to Fontana’s inquiry into the intersection of tangible and conceptual space, the finite canvas and the potentially boundless expanse of three- and four-dimensions. Naming these bodies of work together Concetti spaziali , or “spatial concepts,” Fontana intended his violation of the painting’s surface to be a critical but ultimately constructive gesture—a “creative nothing.”¹ It enabled him to venture beyond pictorial formalism towards a dynamism that nonetheless gives the viewer, to use his words, “an impression of spatial calm, of cosmic rigor, of serenity in infinity.” ²
Since its founding, Luxembourg & Dayan has been deeply engaged in re-examining the artistic developments of postwar Europe, through exhibitions with artists ranging from Alberto Burri and Michelangelo Pistoletto, to Domenico Gnoli and Martial Raysse. The postwar years witnessed the intersection of sociopolitical revolutions and artistic re-evaluations of painting. Fontana was at the forefront of this upheaval. Along with such fellow Italian artists as Burri, Piero Manzoni, and Rodolfo Aricò, he pushed the two-dimensional canvas out of representational or purely expressive registers to rethink the role of painting both philosophically, and as a concrete object in lived space.
The presentation is accompanied by an illustrated publication featuring a text by art historian Pia Gottschaller.
About the Artist
Lucio Fontana was born on February 19, 1899, in Rosario de Santa Fé, Argentina, to an Italian father and an Argentinean mother. He lived in Milan from 1905 to 1922 and then moved back to Argentina, where he worked as a sculptor in his father's studio for several years before opening his own. In 1926, he participated in the first exhibition of Nexus (formed in 1907), a group of young Argentinean artists in Rosario de Santa Fé. On his return to Milan in 1928, Fontana enrolled at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, which he attended for two years.
The Galleria Il Milione, Milan, organized Fontana's first solo exhibition in 1930. In 1934, he joined the group of abstract Italian sculptors associated with the gallery. The artist traveled to Paris in 1935 and joined the group Abstraction-Création (Abstraction Creation, 1931–36). The same year, he developed his skills in ceramics in Albisola, Italy, and later at the Sèvres factory, near Paris. In 1939, he joined the Milanese anti- Fascist group Corrente (Current, 1938–43). It was during this period that he also intensified his lifelong collaboration with architects.
In 1940, Fontana moved to Buenos Aires. With some of his students he founded the Academia de Altamira in 1946, from which emerged the "Manifesto blanco" (“White manifesto,” 1946). He moved back to Milan in 1947 and in collaboration with a group of writers and philosophers signed the "Primo manifesto dello spazialismo" (“First manifesto of spatialism,” 1947). He would subsequently explore these new ideas with his Concetti spaziali ( Spatial concepts , 1949–68).
The year 1949 marked a turning point in Fontana's career; he concurrently created his first series of paintings in which he punctured the canvas with buchi (holes), and his first spatial environment—a combination of sculptures, fluorescent paintings, and black lights to be viewed in a darkened room. The latter work soon led him to employ neon tubing in ceiling decoration. In the early 1950s, he participated in Italian Art Informel exhibitions. During this decade, he explored working with various effects, such as slashing and perforating, in both painting and sculpture. The artist visited New York in 1961 during a show of his work at the Martha Jackson Gallery. In 1966, he designed opera sets and costumes for La Scala, Milan.
In the last year of his career, Fontana became increasingly interested in the staging of his work in the many exhibitions that honored him worldwide, as well as in the idea of purity achieved in his last white canvases. These concerns were prominent at the 1966 Venice Biennale, for which he designed the environment for his work, and at the 1968 Documenta, Kassel, West Germany. Fontana died on September 7, 1968, in Comabbio, Italy.
About Luxembourg & Dayan
Luxembourg & Dayan presents curated, museum-quality exhibitions of works by modern masters and contemporary artists in its spaces in New York and London. Since opening, the gallery has presented a number of critically-acclaimed exhibitions, ranging from historical presentations of artists, such as Alberto Giacometti, Alberto Burri, and Lucian Freud, to thematic survey exhibitions, which since 2011 have included Grisaille , Unpainted Paintings , Thick Paint , The Shaped Canvas, Revisited , and Wo r d B y Wo r d .
Media contact
Andrea Schwan, Andrea Schwan Inc.
Gair Burton, Pickles PR,
Simone Woo, Jiang Hildebrandt Associates Ltd.,
2. L. Fontana, quoted in E. Crispolti, Lucio Fontana: Catalogo ragionato di sculture, dipinti, ambientazioni , Vol. I, Milan: Skira, 2006, p. 105.
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attese 1965 Waterpaint on canvas 287/8 x 23¾ in. (73.2 x 60.3 cm) |
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attese 1967 Waterpaint on canvas 36¾ x 287/8 in. (93.2 x 73.5 cm) |
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attesa 1967 Waterpaint on canvas 13 x 91/2 in. (33 x 24 cm) |
![]() Concetto spaziale, Attese 1968 Waterpaint on canvas 29 x 23¾ in. (73.5 x 60.5 cm) |
Preview (by invitation only) :
Tuesday, March 21, 2017, 3pm to 8pm
Wednesday, March 22, 2017, 1pm to 5pm
Tuesday, March 21, 2017, 3pm to 8pm
Wednesday, March 22, 2017, 1pm to 5pm
Vernissage (by invitation only) :
Wednesday, March 22, 2017, 5pm to 9pm
Wednesday, March 22, 2017, 5pm to 9pm
mpefm
CHINA fair art press release
Public days:
Thursday, March 23, 2017, 1pm to 8pm
Friday, March 24, 2017, 1pm to 9pm
Saturday, March 25, 2017, 11am to 6pm
TICKET OPTIONS*
All tickets are subject to availability. Onsite ticket prices apply from March 23.
Admission is free for children aged five and under, when accompanied by an adult.
Regular price tickets
Vernissage ticket (Mar 22, 5pm to 9pm): HKD 850
One-day ticket (Mar 23 or 24): advance HKD 250, onsite HKD 300
Two-day ticket (Mar 23 to 24): advance HKD 450, onsite HKD 525
Three-day ticket (Mar 23 to 25): advance HKD 650, onsite HKD 750
Saturday ticket (Mar 25): advance HKD 350, onsite HKD 400
Evening ticket (Mar 23, 5-8pm) : advance HKD 180, onsite HKD 230
Concession tickets
One-day (Mar 23 or 24): advance HKD 150, onsite HKD 200
Two-day (Mar 23 to 24): advance HKD 300, onsite HKD 375
Three-day (Mar 23 to 25): advance HKD 400, onsite HKD 500
Saturday (Mar 25): advance HKD 200, onsite HKD 250
Thursday, March 23, 2017, 1pm to 8pm
Friday, March 24, 2017, 1pm to 9pm
Saturday, March 25, 2017, 11am to 6pm
TICKET OPTIONS*
All tickets are subject to availability. Onsite ticket prices apply from March 23.
Admission is free for children aged five and under, when accompanied by an adult.
Regular price tickets
Vernissage ticket (Mar 22, 5pm to 9pm): HKD 850
One-day ticket (Mar 23 or 24): advance HKD 250, onsite HKD 300
Two-day ticket (Mar 23 to 24): advance HKD 450, onsite HKD 525
Three-day ticket (Mar 23 to 25): advance HKD 650, onsite HKD 750
Saturday ticket (Mar 25): advance HKD 350, onsite HKD 400
Evening ticket (Mar 23, 5-8pm) : advance HKD 180, onsite HKD 230
Concession tickets
One-day (Mar 23 or 24): advance HKD 150, onsite HKD 200
Two-day (Mar 23 to 24): advance HKD 300, onsite HKD 375
Three-day (Mar 23 to 25): advance HKD 400, onsite HKD 500
Saturday (Mar 25): advance HKD 200, onsite HKD 250









