La preziosa mostra su Concetto Pozzati a Roma e il ricordo personale di Danilo Eccher sull’artista
A new exhibition at Studio SALES in Rome, curated by Norberto Ruggeri in collaboration with the Archivio Concetto Pozzati, celebrates the work of Italian artist Concetto Pozzati (1935–2017) on the 50th anniversary of his landmark 1976 retrospective at Palazzo delle Esposizioni. The show features five large-scale paintings and a selection of works on paper from the 1970s, a less-studied but highly experimental period in Pozzati's career, all drawn from the artist's archive and not publicly exhibited since the original 1976 show. The article also includes a personal remembrance by curator Danilo Eccher, former director of the Galleria d'Arte Moderna di Bologna, who reflects on his admiration for Pozzati and their intellectual friendship.
This exhibition matters because it reexamines a pivotal yet overlooked phase of Pozzati's output, highlighting his technical and linguistic experimentation with found objects, silkscreened images, and spray paint that diverged from his more recognizable Pop Art style. By bringing these works back into public view, the show reinforces Pozzati's central role in postwar Italian art and his influence on the contemporary art discourse, while also preserving the legacy of an artist who was both a painter and a prominent intellectual—teacher, academy director, and curator.