TO EROTICISM,
HAPPINESS
AND BEYOND.
BY ALICE LABOR
Pietro Ballero
Thank you, come again!, 2019
Virtual diary
More than 398 receipts, instagram
from Jannuary 1th to December 31th, 2019
Courtesy the artist
AN INTERVIEW WITH PIETRO BALLERO
This interview took the shape of a long-distance conversation between Utrecht and Rome. Pietro Ballero
(Turin, 1992) told us about his work from his new home in the Netherlands where he decided to move a few
months ago to further his artistic research at the HKU. From inside a typical, vertically developed Dutch
apartment under a sloping roof, Ballero told us his story: from training at the Albertina Academy of Fine Arts
in Turin (2016) to the master’s degree in Visual Arts and Fashion at the IUAV in Venice, with periods at the
École supérieure des arts Saint Luc in Liège (Belgium) and at the École Supérieure des Beaux Arts in Paris,
up to residencies, such as BoCs Art in Cosenza (2019) curated by Giacinto di Pietrantonio. In 2019 he was
then selected among the finalists of the eighth edition of the Francesco Fabbri Prize for Contemporary Arts.
Alice Labor: You have lived in Turin, Liège,
Venice, Paris and now you are in Utrecht. What
was your relationship with these cities and how
did they influence your work?
Pietro Ballero: In Liège I discovered the world
of communication and graphics which gave me
a different vision and framework at the design
level, acquiring more technical languages. In
Belgium the air, from a cultural point of view,
was magical. It was a breath of fresh air to live
for a while in this slightly punk city where
something always happened. Then, the transition from the Turin Academy to the IUAV in
Venice was radical. It was then that I understood the real significance of an artist’s professionalism and the importance of precision in
one’s practice. Working for seven months at
Xavier Veilhan’s French Pavilion during the
2017 Biennale, I totally immersed myself in
the Venetian and international environment of
contemporary art. Living in close contact with
the artist at the Pavilion for the entire duration
of the exhibition was a human and professional experience that deeply marked me. He
established his studio inside the Pavilion: it was
incredible to see the development of his relationships and work on a daily basis, entering the
heart of creative production. The Pavilion had
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been transformed into a gigantic soundscape, a
musical device capable of being an impressive
and engaging immersive installation and, at
the same time, a real recording studio, shared
and activated by musicians, artists, visitors,
technicians and mediators. Later on, in Paris,
I enjoyed the rich and lively cultural offerings
of the city in solitude. I was admitted to the
workshop of Claude Closky, who encouraged
the creation of new works every week, leading
us to deconstruct them from time to time.
Returning to Turin, I decided to rediscover my
city. I met Alice Visentin with whom I shared
a studio for a year. Among her giant canvases,
I created my mental and physical space in
which to work. It was very stimulating to daily
confront myself with that space and with her.
I have always listened to podcasts on Radio 2,
like Babylon, leaving me contaminated by new
stimuli and translating them into my practice.
These contaminations inspired me a lot, often
leading me to translate the present into forms
of the past.
A.L.: What impression do you have of life for
an artist in the Netherlands after these first
months? What are the differences with the
opportunities offered to artists in Italy?
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P.B.: The passage from Turin to Utrecht was necessary for
me to return to confront myself directly with my work,
seeking the protection of an institution. I have always been
attracted to the Netherlands for what seemed a particular attention to investing in art and creativity through a
plurality of tools. The impression is that the Dutch system
protects the path of artists and supports them throughout
their career. I hope I will have the opportunity to verify this.
Here I would like to strengthen my working methodology,
delving into the forms of the creative process and systematizing the intuition process.
A.L.: Your work often deals with the themes of memory,
consumerism and the precarious condition of work. Where
do your research interests originate from?
P.B.: Even when I was at the Academy I felt a strong urge
towards the political and civic dimension of art. Art is always
a political gesture. At that time, I developed a piece on mafia
victims through the use of digitally reported pizzini, paper
messages used as a means of international communication
by mafia organizations. My reflection developed then maybe
in a more poetic way by telling and deepening political issues,
linked to my individual experience, trying to express this
visceral tension. Today, even through theoretical investigation, I find the right dimension of my practice, giving voice
to an urgency and a movement that I feel I have to express.
Pietro Ballero
Buono a nulla, 2020
Spazio Su, Lecce, IT
Courtesy the artist and Spazio Su
Photo Grazia Amelia Bellitta
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A.L.: Buono a nulla/Good for nothing (2020), your latest
solo exhibition at Spazio Su in Lecce, addressed some crucial
themes for this historical moment: the crisis of the neoliberal and psycho-immune collective and individual system
through the imposition of a constantly competitive condition and the achievement of mandatory happiness. Tell us
about the creative process of this project.
P.B.: Sometimes I am intimidated by my own research,
related to the themes of work and precariousness. I wonder
about my position of privilege and the authenticity of my
voice in this debate and how I can actually contribute to
problematizing certain issues. At the same time, however,
talking about my personal vision allows me to offer a different perspective on these crucial aspects of contemporaneity. In the case of Good for nothing I was kidnapped by an
object: a trolley used to distribute flyers, which I came across
one day in Turin. It was abandoned in front of a building. It
was an unexpected encounter with a plastic and sculptural
object. It was inundated with leaflets that read “bargains”.
This word revealed an aura that evoked something within
me. I photographed it and kept it in my gallery for a few
months. Sometimes I am inexplicably kidnapped by objects.
I file them in my mind and in my “atlas of objects,” a diary
in which I note images that strike me on a visual and poetic
level. When I was invited by Gianni D’Urso and Grazia
Amelia Bellitta to produce a site specific work for Spazio
Pietro Ballero
Buono a nulla, 2020
Spazio Su, Lecce, IT
Courtesy the artist and Spazio Su
Photo Grazia Amelia Bellitta
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A.L.: From receipts, to calendars, to postcards,
collecting is an integral part of your practice.
Where does this need to collect come from?
P.B.: I tried to transform a problem in a therapeutic way into an instrument of my artistic
practice. Accumulation is a pathology of
my family and I have developed, perhaps in
contrast to this trend, a certain need for order.
Accumulation as a collection also derives from
the relationship I have with objects and the
aura that some of them emanate. Collecting
allows me to catalog and archive my relationship and my discourse with objects. These practices are certainly daughters of the era we live
in, where archiving is an individual and shared
social practice, also through social networks.
placed in the small square where Blam’s headquarters are located, inside a deconsecrated
church. The title is a declaration of love for the
neighborhood in which Blam acts through their
projects. I would like to identify other writings
that accompany people on their daily journeys
across the city, part of the landscape and of
a great urban poem. I like this idea of walls
following you with statements that become
a daily presence. I wondered about the rituality of those who live in these areas and what
kind of relationship arises with these phrases
written on the walls, not read as the degradation of a city, but as presences and companions
of its life. The attempt is to re-read the streets
and discover their stories through these words
“highlighting them.” During a workshop, we
will make urban explorations of the city in
search of these wall writings that can be illuminated and reproduced with neon installations.
A.L.: È amore vero/It’s true love is the title of
A.L.: You participated in the BoCs Art resi-
a disorientation, a search for orientation in the
face of the language of the digital world that has
transformed our lives.
Pietro Ballero
Buono a nulla, 2020
Spazio Su, Lecce, IT
Courtesy the artist and Spazio Su
Photo Grazia Amelia Bellitta
Su, I felt it was time to bring out the image of
this cart. My research and theoretical readings
related to the precariousness of our time, from
Mark Fisher to Franco Bifo Berardi, have led
me to investigate this difficult condition even
more in this period of pandemic. The flyers
I created for this occasion were reminiscent
of spam and the language of assault advertising that offers quick illusory solutions to the
most common problems. I like to work on the
border, in the gap between the real and the
virtual world which, even if part of the same
cosmos, becomes an instrument of investigation of the present. It’s like working with
chiaroscuro. Printing the spam you usually
receive by email, producing a physical object
in the form of flyers, creates the disorientation
that allows us to question ourselves as individuals and part of a community.
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A.L.: What role can empathy and eroticism play
in this context?
P.B.: Bifo’s eroticism, intended as contact with
the human being and contact between two
bodies, is increasingly lacking in this historical
moment. In this sense, now the role of the body,
which I have always believed to be tangent to my
artistic research, becomes central to my work.
The consumer’s body in the virtual dimension
acquires a new self-awareness. The individual
has a control over his own body and image that
perhaps had never been achieved before. This
transformed eroticism, on the one hand, is
absent because there is no physical contact with
the body of the other, while on the other hand
the presence of our virtual body seems to counterbalance this absence. The intangible world
becomes even more present in the face of this
lack. My work invites to a possible awareness of
the winning project of the Lumina Award that
you will realize in Salerno this year. The award
is promoted by the Blam collective which
promotes urban regeneration processes. How
does your project fit into this regenerative path?
P.B.: Blam is a collective of architects who
carries out a series of ambitious projects in
Salerno in conjunction with the city, other
local associations and its inhabitants. I took
part in the public call of the Lumina Award by
presenting a project of light installations in the
city that would come into direct contact with
the citizens. This allowed me to reflect on the
impact of art in public spaces, in close contact
with the daily life of the inhabitants of a territory. Confronting myself directly with people
is also an individual challenge. I like the idea
of conceiving a collective work, born from
the multiple visions of the people who live in
the Salerno neighborhood where I will work.
This collective creative process, which catalyzes
many different energies, stimulates my practice
a lot. The light installation È amore vero will be
dence in Cosenza and in Traffic - Festival of
Gentle Souls in San Lorenzo in Campo. How
did you live these collective design experiences?
P.B.: The Traffic Festival was organized by
Matteo Binci, Pietro Consolandi and Bianca
Schröder. With Teresa Satta we carried out
a relational work that confronted the local
community of the town of San Lorenzo in
Campo. Thanks to these exchanges, we created
a project linked to the perception of homes’
plans. The layouts were created by those who
lived in those rooms as guests in order to see the
difference between the experience of a person
living those spaces every day and that of someone
experiencing it in transit. It was very interesting
to create these bonds with the village, trying to
convey the meaning of our work to a community, showing aspects of everyday life that often
remain hidden and sharing beautiful life stories
with them. This almost romantic dimension
allows you to regain eroticism with people, in
the sense we mentioned earlier. We installed
our work Ciao, siamo umani strani/Hello, we
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are strange humans (2019) in the public washhouse of the village.
A.L.: In your works Crolli/Collapses (2018)
and LOL (2019) the themes of war and the
fragility of images in relation to time and the
dichotomy between digital and analog return.
Why do you feel the urgency to address these
issues? What do you think are the effects of
digital life on collective and individual memory
today?
P.B.: I like to highlight the contrast between
real (IRL) and virtual (IVL) and to bring out
the tension that exists between these two interpenetrating spheres. My work interacts in that
grey area in the attempt to seek an orientation between these two dimensions, as I also
did in the work The Dead Weight of History.
Greetings from Venice (2018) where the cruel
comments of social networks take on a physical
dimension as postcards. The filter of a screen
forces the reader to have a greater distance in
the face of violent and racist statements, as in
this case. Reading the same sentences through
the lens of human handwriting links that
thought to an act and an idea that have their
own tangible individuality and physicality. In
the work LOL, the singularity of the image
responds to the abundance of online visual
production and is a call to rediscover images
omitted from history or memory. While in
the case of Crolli, the images I collected on
Google maps as a tourist on street view represent six Syrian UNESCO sites before they were
damaged by the war. The crumpled sheets
of paper on which I have printed these disappeared images will deteriorate over time, physically bringing back the fragility of those images.
A.L.: Your works often appear playful and
extremely colorful, as if to recall reminiscences
of a returning childhood, however, revealing
complex and sometimes traumatic realities of
history or contemporaneity. Why do you think
your practice often refers to the dimension of
game?
P.B.: I believe that, on the one hand, it is an
exercise to see certain things from a different
perspective, on the other, it allows me to bring
out even more the contrast between certain
themes. During the BoCs Art residency I
created the work You still have time (2019). It
was a children’s birthday streamer that created
a strong contrast between the content of the
message and the festive colors. Playful language
allows us to exorcise the seriousness of the
complex time we live in. A child’s eye can ease
the burden of this forced perception.
A.L.: I find that the reflection born from your
work You still have time (2019) is very interesting for the way in which you combine the use of
specific local traditions with a political message
of collective emancipation. Do you think local
Pietro Ballero
Ciao, siamo umani strani, 2019
Site specific project within the Traffic Festival,
Courtesy the artists
Photo Pietro Consolandi
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traditions can awaken us from the torpor of the capitalist system?
P.B.: I am not convinced that the past is the belle époque to which we must
aspire. Sometimes we have to look beyond and rethink the world by reinventing the future. In that work the contrast had emerged from an unexpected encounter. In the villages in the provinces of Cuneo and Turin,
the friends of marrying couples hang sarcastic banners on poles that can
often be seen in the roundabouts in the path between the house and the
church. “You still have time” was one of these abandoned banners and I
felt it as a direct warning to me. The strength of this sentence allowed me
to examine its different meanings, simultaneously inevitable and optimistic. It gave me confidence and allowed me to question myself also on the
precarious and performative condition of the artist. A child’s birthday
party thus becomes a space in which to question existence.
A.L.: In your work The happy young delivery man (2020) you question
the normative dimension of the optimistic imperative of contemporary
societies. Tell us how this project was born.
P.B.: I have always tried to approach life with a naive optimism of great
openness. However, this led me to question to what extent this optimism
was my choice and where it became an external imposition. The idea of
being happy at all costs thus loses its centrality. The individual performativity of a society that wants us to be productive beings is questioned,
just as happiness and optimism can be reinterpreted as fuels destined for
mere production. From an iconographic point of view, I was inspired by
catalogers of stereotypical images, such as Shutterstock, which have now
become part of the world of memes. It is interesting to understand how
an image cataloger wants to address a certain type of imagery through a
title and certain characterizing adjectives that I have taken up in the title of
the work itself. In this historical moment the reality of the delivery world
Pietro Ballero
Crolli, 2018
Courtesy the artist
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and the work ethic make these images even more unreal. Hence the
immediate contrast between reality and its virtual representation.
The essay Entreprecariat by Silvio Lorusso (2018) addresses these
issues through the oxymoron of the precarious entrepreneur, a
condition that strongly involves art workers. The self-entrepreneur
is called to sell and advertise himself as a company, but in a disarming, precarious condition.
A.L.: Through micro-stories, your practice investigates contempo-
raneity. What are the stories you would like to explore in the future?
What are your next projects?
P.B.: My atlas/notebook keeps this answer. It depends on the rhythm
of the forthcomi.
Pietro Ballero
Crolli, 2018
Courtesy the artist
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Pietro Ballero
Il peso morto della storia - Greetings from Venice, 2018
Fondazione Francesco Fabbri, Pieve di Soligo, IT
Courtesy the artist
Pietro Ballero
LOL, 2019
Photography
Conserveria, Turin, IT
Courtesy the artist and Associazione Culturale Azimut
Photo Marco Ronca
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Pietro Ballero
LOL, 2019
Photography
Conserveria, Turin, IT
Courtesy the artist and Associazione Culturale Azimut
Photo Marco Ronca