•  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
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SELECTED WORKS BY Angelina Gualdoni

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Angelina Gualdoni
Midway

2005

Acrylic and oil on canvas

122 x 152.5
The mangled supports of a delapidated structure are silhouetted against a chemical sky like wild brambles. Midway belongs to a series of recent works depicting a world in constant change, prey to mankind's malevolent inattentiveness. Abandoned buildings are eaten up by the ground on which they once proudly stood, subservient partners in a dialogue between the natural and man-made over which they have relinquished control. The role of chance is apparent in both the painting's subject matter and technique. Drips, spills and stains create a force of abstraction that threatens to engulf what remains of the representational imagery.
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Angelina Gualdoni
Praca dos Tres Poderes (Morning)

2005

Acrylic and oil on canvas

122 x 183
Praca dos Tres Poderes is a large, imposing square at the heart of Brasilia, the political capital of Brazil. Constructed between 1956 and 1960 to a design by visionary architect Oscar Niemeyer, and heralded as a landmark in contemporary urban planning, the city has come to be seen as a terrible utopian failure. Functionless, soul-numbing, and inhospitable to human trafffic, it today stands as a dated, retro icon, and a symbol of the death of Modernism itself. Gualdoni perfectly captures this emptiness, portraying a vast expanse of barren sky above the deserted pedestrian plaza, empty but for the discarded trolley of a popcorn vendor. The present, it is all too clear, is elsewhere, and the future is one of hushed uncertainty.

ARTICLES

Angelina Gualdoni at Vedanta - ChicagoBy Susan Snodgrass

Angelina Gualdoni's richly nuanced paintings, six of which made up her impressive solo debut "Demo," explore notions of progress and decline by presenting images of utopian architecture in a state of ruin.
These works, all acrylic and oil on canvas, document the demolition of the Horizons pavilion, a theme ride and multimedia exposition based on conceptualizations of the future. Constructed in 1983 as part of Future World at Disney's Epcot Center in Orlando, it was destroyed in 1999 and later replaced by another tourist attraction. The pavilion, a circular steel-frame structure, is, for the artist, emblematic of the modernist faith in social transformation achieved through technological means. It is also a symbol of failed dreams, of a future that never came to pass. Yet Gualdoni sees something recuperative amid the rubble, as evinced by the formal and conceptual contradictions at play within each of her carefully articulated compositions. This idealistic edifice is depicted from slightly skewed vantage points that give the appearance of being both far and near, and in multiple stages of decomposition.

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Source: findarticles.com