Gallerie d’Italia, Milan
10.06–17.07.2022

At Milan’s Gallerie d’Italia, an Intesa Sanpaolo museum, the exhibition entitled “Collezione Henraux 1960-1970” – curated by Edoardo Bonaspetti, casts the spotlight on the major collection of marble sculptures produced by Henraux.

Visual identity: Lorenzo Mason Studio
Visual identity: Lorenzo Mason Studio

The exhibition, staged in the evocative Octagonal Courtyard and in the Alessandro Garden of the Gallerie d’Italia in Milan, highlights seven of the twenty-five Henraux sculptures in the Intesa Sanpaolo collection. For the occasion, the entire group has undergone a major, cutting-edge conservation operation.

The exhibition presents documents, archival photographs, models and reproductions organised into themed groups, and encapsulates the vital context in which the sculptures were created, the genesis of the Henraux collection and the extraordinary exemplar of corporate culture provided by the company.

The elements of the exhibition design, conceived by studio 2050+, are made from marble – the material extracted from the same quarries used by the artists at the time for their own sculptures – and are redolent of the creative processes whereby the raw material is fashioned into works of art, but also of a unique, virtuous relationship between nature, culture and industry.

Henry Moore alle cave delle Cervaiole insieme a tecnici e dirigenti Henraux / Henry Moore at the Cervaiole quarries with Henraux technicians and managers, 1958.
Henry Moore alle cave delle Cervaiole insieme a tecnici e dirigenti Henraux / Henry Moore at the Cervaiole quarries with Henraux technicians and managers, 1958.

Over the course of its more than 200 years in business, Henraux has been at the forefront of innumerable projects and collaborations in the field of international visual culture. After the Second World War, the company began to establish an extraordinary relationship with the visual arts, under the far-sighted guidance of Erminio Cidonio, who in 1956 would take over at the helm. Against a tumultuous backdrop marked by emerging impulses and the need for renewal, Henraux redefined its corporate and cultural identity, making the most of Italy’s dynamism and artistic zeal to grasp the opportunities afforded by the combination of sculptural experimentation and industrial production.

The 1957 meeting with the British sculptor Henry Moore, who had made his way to Versilia to create the monumental abstract work Reclining Figure, produced for the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, encouraged this approach and helped to give rise to a flourishing period of innovation and artistic research. In the space of a few years, Jean (Hans) Arp, Pietro Cascella, Rosalda Gilardi, Émile Gilioli, Jacques Lipchitz, Morice Lipsi, Joan Miró, Isamu Noguchi, Maria Papa Rostkowska, Giò Pomodoro, Antoine Poncet, Branko Ružić, François Stahly, Georges Vantongerloo and many others came to Querceta, a district within the municipality of Seravezza, in the province of Lucca, and made their sculptures using Henraux’s marble and its workforce, contributing to a wider cultural relaunch of the company and the surrounding area.

Jean (Hans) Arp, Marguerite Arp ed Erminio Cidonio discutono i bozzetti di
Jean (Hans) Arp, Marguerite Arp ed Erminio Cidonio discutono i bozzetti di "Femme paisage" / Jean (Hans) Arp, Marguerite Arp and Erminio Cidonio discuss the sketches of "Femme paisage", 1964. Photo: Ilario Bessi

In the late 1960s and early ’70s, the vigour that had characterised this exceptional period began to tail off due to changes in company policy and, shortly after having been exhibited in 1972 in the showpiece courtyard of the Palazzo dei Diamanti in Ferrara, the collection was dispersed. In 1973, twenty-five works were sold to what was then the Banca Commerciale Italiana, under the enlightened chairmanship of Raffaele Mattioli, eventually flowing into what is today the collection of Banca Intesa Sanpaolo.

Joan Miró,
Joan Miró, "Oiseau solaire", 1968. Photo: Ilario Bessi

The initiative is a taster for the high-profile exhibition that is due to be held in Querceta di Seravezza, at the headquarters of the Foundation, from 25 July to 18 September 2022.

Curator Edoardo Bonaspetti
General coordination Manuela Della Ducata, Nicola Gnesi
Exhibition set-up 2050+ / Guglielmo Campeggi, Kyriacos Christofides,
Ippolito Pestellini Laparelli, Massimo Tenan
Design Lorenzo Mason Studio