Literary references are not lacking either: from Joyce’s Finnegans Wake, to Raymond Roussel’s Locus Solus, to the famous lines from Salvatore Quasimodo’s poem “Ed è subito sera,” which, written by Kiefer himself on a wall in the last room, close the exhibition, flanking four photographs printed on paper mounted on lead from the Occupations of the late 1960s, in the series Heroische Sinnbilder (2009).
Looking closely at the layering of thoughts and materials deposited on these battered canvases, thinking about their long and arduous process of composition, a perfect circle is created in which “Rubble represents not only an end, but also a beginning.” So, it is no wonder that in the documentary presented at Cannes Film Festival last May by German director Wim Wenders, Anselm (2023), we see Kiefer whistling in his immense studio as he rides lightly on a bicycle through the ruins of his art, thriving with new meanings.
Exhibition: Anselm Kiefer. Fallen Angels. Location: Palazzo Strozzi, Florence Dates: from 22nd March to 24th July 2024