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Le Monde : Avec la disparition de Francesco Marino di Teana, la sculpture perd un “philosophe de l’espace” – Art For All
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Libération : Marino Di Teana, la ville mode d’emploi

“Un poète et un philosophe de l’espace, selon la formule de Marie-Ange Brayer, directrice du Frac Centre (Fonds régional d’art contemporain), s’en est allé. Francesco Marino di Teana, qui s’est éteint le 1er janvier à l’hôpital de Brunoy (Essonne) à 91 ans, était connu pour ses œuvres monumentales.

Avec lui, la sculpture se fait architecture, elle est un édifice, le vide se fait matière contribuant à l’équilibre des formes. Il considérait d’ailleurs qu’une œuvre est autant structurée par ses vides que par ses pleins, d’où sa théorie du “vide actif”“Pour créer un dialogue harmonique dans l’espace, il faut un certain nombre de formes libres, comme il faut une certaine distance entre deux personnes pour que la conversation soit significative.” Il a su aussi, confie la galeriste Denise René, “donner une humanité au plus froid des matériaux, l’acier” grâce à son étonnante sensibilité au métal…”

Publié le 13 janvier 2012 par Francis Gouge.

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Born amongst a family of peasants, Francesco Marino di Teana was successively a shepherd, a mason in Italy (Teana), site foreman, architect and student at the Art University of Argentina before moving to Paris in 1953. He was a painter, sculptor, architect, poet and philosopher and becomes one of the major sculptors of the 20th with his theories on “tri-unitarian” logic and architectural sculpture. Represented for more than 20 years by the mythical Denise René gallery and winner of prestigious artistic prizes, he was acclaimed by some of the greatest creators and art critics of his time. Precursor of the Monumenta’s at the Grand Palais with the exhibition of his monumental fountains (9 m high for 16 long), that he made with Saint-Gobain (Glass and industrial materials company), he has raised more than 40 monumental sculptures throughout France, one being the highest iron sculpture in Europe, “Liberté“ (Liberty), that is 20 meters high (at Fontenay-sous-bois). His lifetime work was the object of a retrospective in 1975 at the Paris Museum of Modern Arts, he represented Argentina at the Venice biennial of 1982, and won the academy of fine arts prize in 2009.