(Milano, 1936)
120 × 80 cm / 46.8 × 31.2 in
On 23 May every year since 1992, in Palermo and other Italian
cities, white sheets are hung from the house windows,
a sort of flash-mob ahead of its time. After the Capaci and
Via d’Amelio bombings, this recurring event has become a
symbol of opposition to the Mafia and a sign of freedom and
justice. It is a sign born not out of political will or appointed
institutions, but out of popular will which is tired of abuse,
violence and injustice.
In commemorating this anniversary, Umberto Mariani draws
the attention of students (especially those at the Michelangelo
Guggenheim artistic high school), the people of Cameroon
(which is present at the Venice Biennale for the first
time with its national pavilion), and all visitors to the fact that
crime is everywhere, not just in Sicily. It is wherever there is
corruption and wherever it hampers free personal growth
and the honest development of a healthy economy nurtured
by new generations.
Umberto Mariani has hung white drapery on all 28 windows
of the first floor of the high school overlooking the ancient
monastic cloister. They are pleated in the traditional expressive
style that has made him famous in the art world and are
left free to flutter naturally in the breeze.
Espousing the symbolism stemming from the Sicilian event,
the artist conveys a strong message against corruption as an
absolute evil, which art must shine a light on and raise the
public’s awareness about so we do not remain indifferent.
Only later, at the end of the Venice Biennale, will the drapery
be collected and placed by the artist in special display cases,
each bearing a progressive number from 1 to 28, the date
of the Biennale, and the exhibition venue. Each ‘sheet’ or
‘drape’ will be unique and will faithfully reproduce the folds
and colours that time and weather have conferred on it.