Andrea Bianconi: Journey of the Chair
Past exhibition
Overview
The Sit Down To Have an Idea series first began in the artist's studio in 2016 at a very important moment in Bianconi’s life. No ideas were coming to him that day, and he felt at a creative impasse. Then looking over at his grandmother's chair standing in a corner of his studio in Vicenza, Italy, he impulsively wrote on the chair 'Sit Down To Have an Idea.’ Instinctively, he sat down in the chair and at that moment, he immediately had the predisposition to have an idea. Thus was born the manifesto chair, an idea that has touched numerous people to date, and traveled many places since its inception.
Since its unveiling in Bologna in 2020 during the city’s famed Arte Fiera festival, where it was activated in 24 sites with the public invited to contemplatively rest in armchairs, Sit Down To Have an Idea has been surprising and captivating viewers throughout Italy via Bianconi’s performative activations.
These include the project on the Cima Carega mountaintop in the Dolomite region where the chair is permanently installed, also in the picturesque village of Colletta di Castelbianco in Liguria, along the Tyrrhenian coast in Tropea, and atop a medieval tower in the village of Chiampo.
Next, a book was born, Andrea Bianconi: La Sentinella (The Sentinel), published last September by Italian art press Vanilla Edizioni, pairing Bianconi’s performances with the chairs and his drawings, alongside images by four international photographers.
Above all, Sit Down To Have an Idea aligns with the artist’s practice — one that interweaves allegorical drawing, painting, sculpture, performance, and implied poetry in a potent tincture informed by contemporary social conscience. Significantly, Sit Down To Have an Idea makes its American debut at Barbara Davis Gallery, Houston, who has represented Bianconi for 13 years of his two-decade career, presenting his works and performances in more than a dozen solo and group exhibitions.
Andrea Bianconi's Sit Down To Have an Idea series further developed in 2022. His upcoming second activation — the first in America — draws inspiration from the BIGA and ITALIA chairs, produced by LUXY, thus continuing his poetic project that has been installed and performed across Italy.
Bianconi specifically chose the pink BIGA chair because he was inspired by its historical form, which is reminiscent of the grand Roman chariots with their wheels. A chair with wheels, Bianconi says, can be moved from one place to another. It is a chair that contains the idea of travel and displacement. He then chose the ITALIA gray chair, "with wheels, a chair that is part of our daily life, our workplace, our daily decisions.“ The artist's inspiration lies in this very dynamism and transience of the human condition.
Bianconi says of his big-picture, inspiring concept:
"The journey of my idea chair centers around the notion of the human experience as it relates to being a thinker. The chair becomes a metaphorical object and is representative of the birthplace of ideas; it is where one returns to imagine, think, create."
“The idea behind the exhibition is precisely that of the journey of both the chair and ourselves in the search of the greatest idea. A journey into our desires, a journey into our daily life,” Bianconi emphasizes.
Since its unveiling in Bologna in 2020 during the city’s famed Arte Fiera festival, where it was activated in 24 sites with the public invited to contemplatively rest in armchairs, Sit Down To Have an Idea has been surprising and captivating viewers throughout Italy via Bianconi’s performative activations.
These include the project on the Cima Carega mountaintop in the Dolomite region where the chair is permanently installed, also in the picturesque village of Colletta di Castelbianco in Liguria, along the Tyrrhenian coast in Tropea, and atop a medieval tower in the village of Chiampo.
Next, a book was born, Andrea Bianconi: La Sentinella (The Sentinel), published last September by Italian art press Vanilla Edizioni, pairing Bianconi’s performances with the chairs and his drawings, alongside images by four international photographers.
Above all, Sit Down To Have an Idea aligns with the artist’s practice — one that interweaves allegorical drawing, painting, sculpture, performance, and implied poetry in a potent tincture informed by contemporary social conscience. Significantly, Sit Down To Have an Idea makes its American debut at Barbara Davis Gallery, Houston, who has represented Bianconi for 13 years of his two-decade career, presenting his works and performances in more than a dozen solo and group exhibitions.
Andrea Bianconi's Sit Down To Have an Idea series further developed in 2022. His upcoming second activation — the first in America — draws inspiration from the BIGA and ITALIA chairs, produced by LUXY, thus continuing his poetic project that has been installed and performed across Italy.
Bianconi specifically chose the pink BIGA chair because he was inspired by its historical form, which is reminiscent of the grand Roman chariots with their wheels. A chair with wheels, Bianconi says, can be moved from one place to another. It is a chair that contains the idea of travel and displacement. He then chose the ITALIA gray chair, "with wheels, a chair that is part of our daily life, our workplace, our daily decisions.“ The artist's inspiration lies in this very dynamism and transience of the human condition.
Bianconi says of his big-picture, inspiring concept:
"The journey of my idea chair centers around the notion of the human experience as it relates to being a thinker. The chair becomes a metaphorical object and is representative of the birthplace of ideas; it is where one returns to imagine, think, create."
“The idea behind the exhibition is precisely that of the journey of both the chair and ourselves in the search of the greatest idea. A journey into our desires, a journey into our daily life,” Bianconi emphasizes.
Works
Installation Views