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ANDREA BOWERS AT FONDZIONE FURLA & GAM – GALLERIA D’ARTE MODERNA OF MILAN

Fondazione Furla and GAM – Galleria d’Arte Moderna of Milan are proud to present Moving in Space without Asking Permission, an Andrea Bowers exhibition curated by Bruna Roccasalva. Andrea Bowers’s first solo show in an Italian institution, Moving in Space without Asking Permission offers an immersive experience within the work of the artist and her commitment to the struggle for gender equality and women’s emancipation.

Andrea Bowers is an American artist and activist whose research combines aesthetic practices and political engagement from a feminist perspective. For almost thirty years, the artist has investigated fundamental issues such as gender equality, women’s and workers’ rights, immigration, and environmentalism through a formal approach connoted by a strong visual impact. She makes use of a variety of media, from drawing to video to neon installations, rendering complex topics through an accessible and direct vocabulary. Her work is a perfect example of how art can convey socially relevant messages through the aesthetic power of its language.

The exhibition Moving in Space without Asking Permission is part of a broader reflection on feminism that Bowers has been developing for some time, and focuses in particular on the relationship between feminism and bodily autonomy, amplifying issues from the present and the past. Each of Bowers’s projects begins with in-depth research into the context in which she operates and an encounter with its social fabric. In this case, Moving in Space without Asking Permission takes its starting point from the artist’s confrontation with some of today’s Italian feminist experiences, in particular the work of the philosopher and activist Alessandra Chiricosta, who studies and teaches the practice of martial arts as a form of bodily self-awareness, thus offering a break with gender stereotypes. The project was also created in response to the specific nature of the GAM exhibition context: a museum whose collection refers to the historical period around the turn of the 20th century, when the women’s emancipation movement in Italy was in its infancy.

The exhibition path winds through the five rooms on the ground floor of the GAM, combining iconic works and ambitious new productions that testify to the artist’s great versatility of artistic language: from the neon sign Another Kind of Strength (after Alessandra Chiricosta’s book “Un altro genere di forza. Costruzione sociale e filosofica della debolezza del corpo femminile e del mito della forza virile”, 2019) (2022), which opens the exhibition, to the documentary video filmed inside Villa Reale and dedicated to a lesson on “feminist combative self-awareness” held by Alessandra Chiricosta; from the paintings on collages of recycled cardboard to the two striking environmental installations Political Ribbons (Fondazione Furla/ GAM Milan) and Feminist Fans (2022).

Moving in Space without Asking Permission renders the strength of a research approach in which political activism and artistic practice are inextricably linked, while also showing us how—through the specificities of its language—art can stimulate reflections on and broaden our awareness of the most pressing issues.

Andrea Bowers. Moving in Space without Asking Permission is the fourth edition of the Furla Series project, and is the upshot of collaboration between Fondazione Furla and GAM: a partnership undertaken in 2021 with the exhibition by Nairy Baghramian and recently renewed for the staging of the upcoming events in the cycle.

Furla Series is the project cycle that since 2017 has engaged Fondazione Furla in the creation of exhibitions in collaboration with major Italian art institutions, with an all-female program designed to valorize and showcase women’s fundamental contribution to contemporary culture.

Furla Series is realized with the support of Intesa Sanpaolo.

Andrea Bowers
Andrea Bowers was born in 1965, in Wilmington, Ohio. She lives and works in Los Angeles.

Bowers has had solo exhibitions at major international museums such as:  Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2022); Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (2021); Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach (2020); Weserburg Museum of Modern Art, Bremen (2019); Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati (2017); Bronx Museum of the Arts, New York (2016); Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton, Paris (2014); Pomona and Pitzer College Museum of Art, Claremont, (2014); Wiener Secession, Wien, and The Power Plant, Toronto (2007). 

Her work has been featured in recent group exhibitions at, among others: OGR Torino (2021); Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (2021); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2020); Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland (2020);  Henry Art Gallery, Seattle (2019); Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Amsterdam (2019); The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C. (2019); Kunstverein in Hamburg (2019); MAXXI, Rome (2018); Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw (2018);  High Line, New York (2018); Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt (2018); Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum, New York (2018);  Getty Center, Los Angeles (2018); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2018); Triennale Milano, Milan (2017); Museum of Modern Art, New York (2017); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2017).

She has taken part in international biennials and art events, including: documenta 14, Fridericianum, Kassel (2017); Biennial of the Americas, Denver (2015);  La Biennale de Montréal, (2014); Gwangju Biennale (2014); Whitney Biennial, New York  (2004). 

Her works are held in institutional collections as for example: Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Center, Washington D.C.; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach.