Banned Milan gay art exhibition open in Florence

Source: italymag.co.uk
A huge exhibition of gay art has finally found a home
in Florence after clashes with Catholic politicians
forced organisers to pull the plug on the same show
in Milan earlier this year.
Over 200 works by 150 artists are on display in
Florence’s Palazzina Reale tracing connections
between art and homosexuality from the birth of
photography to the present day in the largest show of
its kind ever held in Italy.
Among the works exhibited are a sadomasochistic
portrait of a man in a gimp mask by controversial
American photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, drawings
of heavily muscled men engaged in graphic sexual acts
by fetish artist Tom of Finland, and a picture of two
men kissing under a crucifix by British painter John
Kirby.
The privately funded exhibition was originally set to
open to the public at Milan’s Palazzo della Ragione
in July but stayed shut amid concerns about whether
the works on display offended Catholics and were
suitable for children.
Milan Mayor Letizia Moratti insisted on seeing each
of the works to be included in the exhibition and
drew up a blacklist of paintings and sculptures that
had to be removed before it could open to the public.
But Milan Culture Councillor Vittorio Sgarbi and the
show’s organisers decided to scrap the exhibition
altogether and move it to a different city rather
than withdraw the contested works.
The show has opened in Florence uncensored, albeit
without the official blessing of the city council.
”The public finally has the opportunity to judge for
themselves what is perhaps the most contested
exhibition of recent years,” said curator Eugenio
Viola at the show’s inauguration.
”It’s good news for freedom of expression and
thought, and a happy epilogue to a difficult affair”.
Viola has based his selection of works on a common
theme of expression rather than on the sexuality of
the artists, who are both gay and straight.
”On the basis of that logic some works have an openly
homoerotic content, while in others this expresses
itself in a less obvious way through codes, symbols,
allegories and metaphors,” he explained.
The show takes in over 100 years of gay art,
including black-and-white photography by German
artist Wilhelm von Gloeden from 1900, balletic nudes
by Bruce of Los Angeles from the 1950s, portraits of
famous male torsos by American fashion photographer
Herb Ritts from the 1980s, and a video installation
by bald German couple Eva and Adele, self-proclaimed
‘hermaphrodite twins’, from the 1990s.
Other famous names include David Hockney, Keith
Haring and Bruce Weber as well as the British royal
family’s favourite snapper Mario Testino. Self-taught
Italian artist Carol Rama is among the 20 women
artists with works on display.
But the most likely crowd-pullers are two sculptures
by young Italian artists that topped Moratti’s
blacklist in Milan: Paolo Schmidlin’s Miss Kitty
(2006) - the life-size replica of an ageing,
semi-naked transvestite in a wig, white underpants
and stockings bearing a strong resemblance to Pope
Benedict XVI; and Paolo Cassara’s Pieta’ (2007),
which portrays a latex-clad Virgin Mary cradling a
blow-up doll in place of the baby Jesus.
‘Art and Homosexuality - From Von Gloeden to Pierre
et Gilles’ runs at the Palazzina Reale in Florence
until 6 January 2008.
Source: italymag.co.uk