• NEED on Next Exit

    Copertina, manifesto centrale e intervista sulla rivista Next Exit di Luglio/Agosto. L’immagine di copertina è il quadro NEED del 2009, mixed media su tela, attualmente in una collezione privata brasiliana.

    Cover, central poster and interview on Next Exit magazine, July/August issue. The cover image is the painting NEED from 2009, mixed media on canvas, currently in a private collection in Brazil.

     

    Fupete per Cirio

    Fupete Fupete CirioAltaCucina 2012 Fupete per Cirio

    “Per i locali che scelgono il pomodoro della linea Cirio Alta Cucina, studiata per i professionisti della ristorazione, è stata presentata una serie di oggetti esclusivi caratterizzati dallo storico marchio del made in Italy alimentare di eccellenza (Gruppo Conserve Italia). Cirio Alta Cucina lancia la nuova operazione CIRIO POM ART [...] opere di stile vintage (di Cappiello per Cirio nel 1920) e contemporaneo (l’interpretazione in esclusiva per Cirio è dell’artista emergente Fupete)”

    comunicato stampa

    Stories of full-on creativity – L’Uomo Vogue

    Fupete Fupete byElisabettaClaudio LUomoVogue2012 Stories of full on creativity   LUomo Vogue

    “Designers, live painters, produttori musicali. Si muovono dentro e fuori la dimensione del sogno per creare opere misteriose e affascinanti”

    FUPETE / Probabilmente il miglior modo per conoscerlo è ammirarlo in una delle sue performance di live painting. È allora che l’inventiva e la tempra di questo artista livornese, classe 1975, si mostrano senza filtri e mediazioni. ‘Danzo, mi muovo, schizzo e dipingo. Che mi trovi solo o mi esibisca davanti a un pubblico, il mio modo di lavorare non cambia; l’arte per me è cosa tutt’altro che privata’. Le sue opere sono il prodotto prezioso di quella ‘bulimia espressiva’, così l’hanno definita, che guida la sua ispirazione. Che è sempre un frutto del momento, ‘perchè la mia opera nasce dall’improvvisazione’, e di una libertà quasi fanciullesca. Il suo nome ‘è un inno all’infanzia, l’ha inventato un bimbo. È una delicata storpiatura del termine Chupete, che in spagnolo significa ciuccio‘. Con Erika, ‘moglie, assistente e curatrice’ gira il mondo per continuare la sua ricerca. Nei prossimi mesi sarà in Brasile e in Messico, ma anche a Milano. La sua personale ‘Brucia’, con quadri, disegni, sculture e un’esibizione dal vivo, aprirà alla Rojo@artspace il 10/5.

    by Elisabetta Claudio / text by Donato RamaniL’Uomo Vogue, Aprile 2012 n. 430

    so vast is art : interview with Fupete

    Fupete DSC 0181 940x629 720x481 so vast is art : interview with Fupete

    sources: NOVA Festival / so vast is art — (versão em português)

     
    Fupete and Erika are the names behind the project Fupete. The couple has been living and working together for seven years now. Like a perfect Italian couple, they warn me that they disagree a lot but as you may find at the end of this interview, they are in complete synchrony. I must say it was a pleasure talking to these two lovely and brilliant artists that took me down the memory lane and shared their thoughts about work, life and inspiration.

     
    How did you first get involved in arts?

    Fupete: Easy. My grandfather was a painter. He was part of the painters that did the classic italian style paintings from last century, from the beginning of the century; called Macchiaioli. He painted impressionist landscapes. He painted all his life but he started around his 40s and painted until 81 or 82 years old. As a painter he maintained all of his family. He wasn’t a famous artist; painting was his job. He had a gallery for 40 years. He didn’t get to be rich but he managed to sustain the family well. He died when I was 14 so I didn’t have enough time to share with him about art or whatever but every day of my life I remember the smell of the oil paint. When I was a kid I used to watch him paint very close to him. I didn’t study art, but for years I’ve kept thinking about these memories and I realized I wanted to be an artist. I studied other things like Engineering but in the end I came back to this image, this memory…He was also an actor, a very crazy guy! His name was Giacomo and he was part of the Vernacular Theatre.

    Erika: For me it’s completely different. No one in my family likes art. When I was 18 I started to study History of Art at the university and I quickly started to manage and organize exhibitions and festivals. I’m an art curator. Our relationship is ‘complicated’ (referring to her relationship with Fupete) because I am a curator but also an assistant and in this work for NOVA we came up with the idea together.

    Fupete: We’ve been thinking together for many years now. Fupete is an artwork that used to be only mine but it’s been six years that we’re together and there’s a lot about our relationship in our work. It’s been many years since we wanted to do something like Jean Claude; their work is strictly related to their relationship. In our case it’s the same. We are together 24 hours a day.

     
    What’s the story behind the name FUPETE?

    F: I can tell this story in many ways; it can be very fascinating or very easy. My nephew was born in Spain; when he was around two years old he used to say this all the time “Quiero un fupete” that means “I want a fupete”. This was actually a language mistake, a kid mistake, he wasn’t able to pronounce the “ch” and say the correct thing that is “Quiero un chupete”, meaning “I want a pacifier”. At that time I was doing my first series of painting and thinking about being a professional artist and I was searching for a name. I grew up in a culture of nicknames and my name is not a secret but I love to live a second life. I can choose to be whatever I want. When my nephew was asking for a ‘fupete’ I was intrigued by this word. So, it’s an invented word by my nephew. The word doesn’t exist. I thought it was perfect! Since it’s a word that doesn’t exist, if you google ‘fupete’, there’s just me! There are also some books that show up under the name fupete by Leonardo but I didn’t manage to understand what it is. Maybe it’s also an error (laughs).

     
    Can you talk a bit about the work you are developing here?

    F: The title of this work is “Raw Canvas” and it’s a new series of work we’ve been planning to do for many months now. In the past few years, most of my works for exhibitions, my paintings, my drawings went outside the limits of the canvas. I would fulfill the walls of the gallery or the place that the work was being showcased. Many journalists have related these works to street art or urban art because I started to do art when I was in Rome and most of my friends are street artists there, but my work is different from the works on the walls of the streets, I just don’t want limits. And the canvas is a limit for me. The idea of the work is that it still remains Fine Art for me, because I was a kid and I saw my grandfather painting and he was a fine artist; and for me that was incredible! I always dreamed about being like him. My work is mostly related to limits and borders. The idea here is to have a classic canvas, a framed canvas that is stretched trying to escape the limits and conventional shapes. Once it’s finished, it will be more like a sculpture. I still have to paint it to get my idea done, to use it as a real canvas. I want to express this idea that it’s just a painting; it’s a painting trying not to have limits.

    E: This idea also comes from the idea of NOVA. This is a festival where experimentation is very appreciated so we were at home thinking about some kind of work that would also go in this direction. We thought that we would be free to do something very big also.

    F: The idea is to have a flow that goes into space. In the end it will be graphic as well because of the painting.

    E: Also the canvas allows us to create round shapes, something circular that wouldn’t normally be possible for a canvas.

    F: This work could have been done in other materials; people ask us why we didn’t do it in a random textile or other materials like silicon. The idea is to use a real canvas, the same material you would use to stretch on a frame. We want to relate this work to painting.

    E: The idea is to extend the canvas. In the end it’s this only.

    F: Yes. Very simple. And we were very surprised because in all of our research, we might be mistaking, but no one has done this before.

    E: We wanted to do something that didn’t already exist.

    F: When we had this idea we thought that a lot of people might have done it but we only found a few experiments on this kind of work, but they were all very small and this is very strange because this material is very cheap, it’s just wood and raw canvas. I love to have a classic painting on my wall at my place, or a classic poster. I also paint classic canvas; I would love people to have my work on his or her wall but then I think, “Why not extend it? Why not open the canvas and try to see what’s inside?”.

    E: I hope it’s going to be very nice!

    F: In the last couple of years we’ve learned a lot and we have become more courageous and daring.

    E: Yes! Yes.

    F: We now have the courage to do this kind of works in museums or other festivals for the first time, without a previous trial. Also the method we are using is turning out to be what it is minute by minute. We’re inventing! (laughs)

    E: Yes. Inventing a lot. (laughs)

     
    So you improvise?

    F&E: Yes! A lot!

    F: Most of my work is about improvising. Most of her work (points to Erika) is improvised as well. When we curate events or exhibitions of other artists, the way we do it is strictly related to the action of the artist. So this festival is perfect for our work! This festival is perfect for us. We work in progress every day of our lives. We live in a work in progress (laughs).

    E: It’s very important to believe in our work and ourselves. This is very important for doing new things. Do you agree? (laughing and looking at Fupete)

    F: It’s true! We were in Rome and we were busy…

    E: We fight a lot. (laughs)

    F: We had a gallery in Rome for a couple of years. Studio Fupete, it was my studio and also a gallery we shared.

    E: That’s when we started working together.

    F: Yes. It was our first year working together. Seven years ago…we had this gallery and after a year it started to do really well but at some point we realized that it was too much work and that we were going in a direction that wasn’t taking us where we wanted to go. There was too much involvement in the gallery and Rome is very expensive. At a certain point we saw ourselves going in strange directions so we chose to leave everything behind and go back to Tuscany, in the countryside, back to our origin. After seven years I can say it was a good decision.

    E: We did the right thing. We can work really well back there since we don’t have many inputs; we have to improvise.

    F: We have a lot of limits there. It’s far away from everything and this brings you a lot of limits in a certain way. When I do workshops with kids I try to teach them that limits take you to freedom, you know? If you know the limits, you know what you have to do to be free.

    E: If you don’t have limits, in the end you do nothing.

    F: It’s harder to work without limits.

     
    Do you like to work in collaboration with other artists?

    E: Yes.

    F: I try… I’ve done much collaboration in the beginning of my career, in the last few years not so much because we moved to the countryside. I always worked alone, most of the time. I did a few projects with ROJO involving other artists. It’s been many years since I worked together with another artist like I did here with Yang02. I really enjoyed that Takahiro asked me to do something on his wall. It wasn’t planned. I started doing it and we shared a language, there are many words written in Japanese. I think it’s really nice because it’s a machine mixed with a human hand.

    E: And at the same time there aren’t many situations where you can do collaboration back in Tuscany.

    F: We are doing some collaboration but with other kind of arts, not visual arts. We’re doing things in theater, music, and other kind of stuff.

    E: Last year we did a lot of things in this direction.

    F: With other kind of arts, yes; like performing arts. We’re trying to develop a live drawing performance with tagtool. We’re trying to use it in many ways.

    E: With tagtool you can draw live and you can project the image wherever you want.

    F: Without the computer in front of you, you just need the tablet and a wall.

     
    How does your creative process start?

    F: You’re going to have very different answers here (laughs). For my process I need do make a lot of mess in the beginning.

    E: (laughs) Ah! Yes! We are the opposite!

    F: The mess can be whatever. It could be hours searching for references on the web or at a library. It could be a drawing of whatever and I spend days drawing, after a couple of days I go back to my mess and try to figure out what I can take out of it. Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night and draw or write. And in the morning after I realize I had an idea and I just go from there. This has happened many times but the idea always comes out of the mess I did inside my brain days before (laughs). I need a lot of things and information to stimulate my process.

    E: For me is different. I need to see things to visualize my idea.

    F: This is nice and is one of the things I love about her. I met her during a period of my life in which it was very difficult for me to choose what was good and what wasn’t good from my work. After I got to know her she went like “Ah! This is good!” or “No! This is not good! Not good at all!” (laughs). Just intuitive!

    E: Yes. It’s very simple, no? I’m very intuitive.

    F: I’m not intuitive.

    E: He is very rational.

    F: A lot of people see me painting and think I’m going completely random because I make a lot of mess. But for me it’s like a dance, dancing is strictly related to the brain. When you dance, you can go random as long as you know the basis. For me it’s about harmony, if I just go random, this painting will end up in the trash; that’s for sure. I need to have rhythm; and this is completely intuitive. It’s hard to explain, for example, when an actor is really good, you know his good even if he is not acting, you can tell by his presence.

    E: It’s not easy to explain this process…I’m not like him, I don’t have a lot of ideas all the time. 

    F: Most of the time she gets tired of my ideas.

    E: So I think we complement each other.

    F: Not in all the aspects, but we are complementary, yes.

    E: I can choose what’s good about his work and he gives me a lot of ideas!

    F: A lot of people who gets to know us during festivals think that I talk a lot and that she is quiet. But in real life we’re the opposite, she does the talking and I’m very quiet.

    E: He only talks to artists and people related to art! (laughs)

    F: And she talks a lot! (laughs) The thing is, when you’re in a festival, it’s like having too much water in a glass, and if you don’t get rid of some of this water you will spill everything on the floor. And I need to talk a lot with other artists and the people I meet. Most of them are new for me.

    E: I like to observe the other artists.

     
    When do you know the work is done?

    E: I feel it!

    F: She’s very intuitive, so… For me it’s strange… Maybe when I don’t hear sounds anymore. When I’m drawing I have my headphones on but I can do it without, on my own, with my own sounds and at a certain point this rhythm just disappears! It’s finished.

    E: I think he checks all the possibilities before finishing his works, no?

    F: Yeah, maybe. I did a lot of mistakes putting on one more layer of paint! So I’m starting to learn when the work is done. (laughs) It’s about happiness because if the work is really finished, you are happy. You feel that you’ve given life to a son in someway. You can’t be sad if you give life to someone.

     
    What inspires you?

    E: We look up a lot of things on the Internet. We look up a lot of things besides the Internet too: books, images, other artists and other arguments. Experimenting is also very inspiring!

    F: She said probably many of things that also inspire me. What she didn’t say is that working in the forest, in the countryside inspires both of us.

    E: Traveling and staying in the nature really inspires me!

    F: I think that if inspiration is related to the act of doing art then it is also strictly related to the difficulty of being an artist today, for me at least. You can use a lot of practical information, read books, sketch…but I think that the main argument about what inspires me is completely related to this difficulty; this inspires me to go forward! It’s really hard to be an artist nowadays.

    E: It’s all about following your dreams and it’s related to courage…

    F: Or stupidity, maybe (laughs). When I started as a graphic designer, of course I had more money and I know I can do that job. But that’s not who I am. I can’t do that anymore. In the end, it’s not about how much you have but the richness arts bring you in the inside. Also the period and moment in life you are living inspires the work; it can’t be separated. Like this work we’re doing here, we wanted to do this for a long time but if we did it back home it wouldn’t make any sense. The fact that we’re here makes it possible. The festival itself is an inspiration for this work.

     
    What’s your favorite kind of music?

    E: For me…

    F: For you it’s very simple: Rock.

    E: Yes. Rock.

    F: From Metallica to ACDC. (laughs)

    E: Yeah! (laughs) and I also like experimental music, any kind of music that makes you go forward. And I don’t like electronic music.

    F: I notice that most of the people that you asked this question mentioned their favorite bands…but we’re not able to do it. I listen to a lot of music but it’s completely random.

    E: If I think of a band I can say maybe The White Stripes but there are many! I listen to a lot of things but I don’t remember the names of the songs or bands because I don’t want to. It’s a lot!

    F: Every artist that visits our home is asked to leave us a playlist on our computer. We have hours and hours of music. Many of them I’ve never heard in my entire life! Our relationship with music…Ah! Relationship it’s nice! Our relation with music is about empathy. Maybe if I had to say one artist I would go with Keith Jarett. His music saved my life…I learned that music can also be a medicine.

     
    How would you describe the feeling of NOVA?

    F: You go first. (laughs) I always put her in front of me…always.

    E: I think the energy here is perfect. You can talk and meet artists that live in another part of the world and see what they’re doing. It’s very inspiring! I think it’s really, really cool. For me this is real. Very nice!

    F: I’m very happy to be here and very honored. I’m proud of being invited by David. This last week I was here was very intense, vivid and funny! It was perfect for my creative process. I love the idea that there are people watching me work.

     
    Text Juliana D Chohfi
    Photo Giselle Galvão

    qualcuno era comunista

    poster

    qualcuno era comunista
    70x100cm, Fupete 2011

    mostra
    34 designer interpretano il PCI
    , alla Casa dell’Architettura a Roma dal 14 Gennaio al 6 Febbraio

    press
    Abitare
    italiano english
    Aiap italiano 
    Rauch design italiano

    ARTSTARS* auction in London next weekend!

    Fupete IMG 4542 35x35 ARTSTARS* auction in London next weekend!
    Fupete IMG 4433 35x35 ARTSTARS* auction in London next weekend!
    Fupete IMG 4542 ARTSTARS* auction in London next weekend!

    Art Star No.39. Fupete, STAR SESSION, 2010. Gesso, acrylic, photocopy collage and pencil on denim.

    Fupete IMG 4433 ARTSTARS* auction in London next weekend!

    Art Star No.39. Fupete, STAR SESSION, 2010. Gesso, acrylic, photocopy collage and pencil on denim.

    Saturday, December 4 through Monday, December 6

    Phillips de Pury
    Howick Place London SW1P 1BB

    A series of exclusive pieces by Europe’s most exciting young artists will be auctioned at Phillips de Pury’s Howick Place in support of Teenage Cancer Trust

    Fupete Immagine 2 1 500x500 ARTSTARS* auction in London next weekend!Polo Jeans Co. announces the launch of Art Stars – an exhibition of 42 works from a group of Europe’s emerging contemporary artists to be auctioned in London at Phillips de Pury Howick Place on Saturday, December 4 through Monday, December 6. Proceeds from the auction will benefit Teenage Cancer Trust — a charity dedicated to helping young people fight cancer. Throughout the three days, visitors will be able to place silent bids on the Art Stars and the event will conclude with a party on Monday evening in which Simon de Pury will personally auction a selection of the Art Stars live.

    “The Art Stars project is an important partnership for the Polo Jeans brand. We are excited to be working with these talented artists and honoured that Art Stars will be supporting this worthwhile cause,” said David Lauren, Senior Vice President of Advertising, Marketing, and Corporate Communications at Polo Ralph Lauren.

    The Art Starts project is inspired by the iconic American Star Spangled Banner and is synonymous with the philosophy of the of the Polo Jeans Co. brand. The brand commissioned up-and-coming European and Middle Eastern contemporary artists to customise a canvas by creating three-dimensional stars made from the finest American denim. The artists can choose an assortment of materials unique to their specialty and materials ranged from denim and replicas of the American flag to dyes, bleach and embroidery.

    “At Teenage Cancer Trust, we know how important fashion and art are to the daily lives of the patients we work with. This partnership is a fantastic opportunity for us because, as well as allowing some of our young people to get involved in designing their own stars, it also raises vital funds for us to continue to provide the best specialised care for teenagers and young adults with cancer across the UK,” said Simon Davies, Chief Executive of Teenage Cancer Trust.

    Simon de Pury, Chairman of Phillips de Pury, noted, “We are very happy to be joining Polo Jeans Co. in supporting Teenage Cancer Trust.”

    The stars have been displayed in select Polo Jeans Co. stores in cities across Europe before culminating in the exhibition and auction at Phillips de Pury. For more information please visit the Art Stars website at: http://artstars.polojeans.com

    (official press release)

    images courtesy and © Polo Jeans Co. Ralph Lauren