Pier Paolo Calzolari
Lisbon Has Become One of Europe’s
Hottest Art Capitals. How Did That Happen?
Just don't call it 'The New Berlin.'
Lorena Muñoz-Alonso, May 25, 2017
Lisbon has all the ingredients to be Europe’s next
piping-hot art destination: young galleries are opening there, international
dealers are setting up outposts, and dozens of artists are flocking there for
its affordable housing and studio rents. The city, which boasts a refreshing
mix of commercial and the non-profit spaces, also has a contemporary art fair,
ARCOlisboa, which held its second edition last week.
But is it the “New Berlin,” as many articles have proclaimed
in the past few years? A promised land for artists from all over the world, to
come, settle, and live a life devoted to making art?
“Lisbon offers space and opportunities to start new things.
The art scene here is open, friendly, unpretentious, and the city feels like an
exciting combination of Europe and Latin America,” the Mexican artist Rodrigo
Hernández told artnet News. He is one of the most recent additions to the
city’s artistic community, having first arrived several months ago to prepare
his solo exhibition “Plasma,” his debut in both the country and at Galeria
Madragoa.
“While some cities
seem to be at breaking point and throwing artists out, other cities seem
welcoming to us, and Lisbon right now feels like one of these,”Hernández says.
“I think it’s a very positive thing, but to make this development sustainable
in the long run will depend on how solid the projects that are starting now
are. They have to keep bringing new things and maintain a dialogue with the
city.”
He should know, as his successful career in a handful of
cities over the last few years, including Mexico City, Karlsruhe in Germany,
and Basel in Switzerland.
“Every so-called ‘New Berlin’ has unfortunately suffered
from that label, a sign of the constant need of the art world to get excited
about a new location. Maybe Lisbon is the new Berlin, but those grey skies will
never reach us, one hopes!” joked Matteo Consonni, who moved to Lisbon last
year to launch the young and edgy Madragoa, after five years as director of
Franco Noero, one of Turin’s most established commercial galleries.
“Rodrigo Hernández moved here two months ago, while Renato
Leotta [another artist in the Madragoa roster] is coming here more and more
often to use the great production possibilities he has here. Other names that
come to mind are Louis Henderson and Céline Condorelli”
“Yes, since last
spring I am building a life in Lisbon,” Condorelli, who was based in London for
25 years, confirmed to artnet News. “But I don’t like all the attention the
city is getting in regards to real estate. I think the city will be destroyed
by it, in combination with mass tourism. It’s just too fast and too brutal. I
grew up in Florence, which is a very difficult city because of tourism, it’s
dead from the inside, completely emptied out. Artists are not the problem per
se, they are probably the best people to move as they can help maintain local
production, work with carpenters, printers, etc… But, of course we are part of
the problem. I’ve been thinking about it quietly for almost a decades, first
with Emily Wardill, who did move about three or four years ago, but I needed a
bit more time to figure it out and finally last year spent a big chunk of time
in the city.”
Besides a more clement weather, the picturesque views, and
abundant sunlight, Lisbon also offers more affordable rents for housing and
artist studios. While an individual studio in Berlin might set an artist back
an average of €400 a month, a similar option in Lisbon has a monthly rent of
€200-250, which also helps explain the appeal of the Portuguese capital for
young creatives (and for the tech and startup communities, too).
Yet it’s not only youngsters in search of greener pastures
who are making the move to the Portuguese capital. Pier Paolo Calzolari—one of
the key members of the Arte Povera movement and now in his early 70s—moved to
Lisbon one year ago after spending almost 30 years in the rural region of
Marche in Italy.
“I’ve known Lisbon
for a long time and really like it, so two years ago I found the house where I
live and one year ago I moved permanently,” he told artnet News, sitting in the
spacious and bright living room of his house in the area of Santos, a large and
elegant property that sometimes doubles as his studio.
“There is something about the quality of the light that
reminds me of Venice, where I grew up. But there’s something else in Lisbon
that reminds me of Venice, which is how much and how fast the city is changing.
Growing up in Venice in the 1940s, there was barely any tourism. That changed
suddenly in the 1960s, when tourism came to the city and became the biggest
business in Venice, forcing locals to move away, as living there had become too
expensive. Sadly, I’m starting to notice that the same is happening in Lisbon.
It’s like a virus, and I’m starting to see a lot of people trying to make fast
money here, with massive real-estate speculation developing here.”
“I’m not particularly active in the local art scene, with
galleries and institutions. I’m mostly friends with some artists, like Julião
Sarmento. But I know that a lot of young artists are moving here, which I find
very positive, they are bringing fresh blood and shaking up the art scene and
the city, as are all those young galleries opening. That makes me feel
hopeful,” the artist added with a smile.
“In terms of fabricators and materials, I’ve felt that many
artisans have left Lisbon, because of gentrification, and some materials, like
wood and metal, have been hard to find due to the crisis first and then because
of prices getting higher due to speculation. So on occasions, yes, I have found
difficulty in fabricating works,” Calzolari, who’s just had a large solo show
at his New York gallery Marianne Boesky and is working on an upcoming museum
show in Aspen, told artnet News.
“It’s definitely a
good moment for the city and the whole country, although speculation on real
estate and private property is a problem that will effect everyone,” Pedro
Barateiro, a young Portuguese artist with growing international projection,
told artnet News.
“It was such a quick change that it’s scary to think how
quick the recovery was, compared to the long years of austerity. It is a sign
that governments are easily manipulated by other entities once they allow
themselves to be exposed in such manner. There is a lesson to be learned, and
I’m not talking about protectionist laws, or closure, but one that says that
governments can be constituted by different parties once they all agree on
common interests,” he added, referring to the ruling government coalition, led
by a Socialist prime minister, that took power in November 2015.
“As for the system built around art, I just hope the
government and the municipality of Lisbon help artists and all producers within
the field to be less dependent on market laws and create structures for that to
happen,” said Barateiro, who has developed his artistic career mostly in Lisbon
and is very active member of its artistic community. “The art scene is Portugal
is less elitist than before, but we still need the creation of a structure that
supports artists and all the precarious workers that have made this economic
recovery possible.”
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