Giulia Zompa – Center for Italian Modern Art

Giulia Zompa – Center for Italian Modern Art

Fall-Winter season 2022-23

 

Giulia Zompa is a closing calendar year Ph.D. Pupil in Up to date Art Background at the College of Milan (Italy). Her doctoral investigate focuses on the Italian artistic predicament between the 1980s and 1990s having into consideration, as a scenario research, what transpired at the exhibition degree in the metropolis of Milan.

Giulia concluded her reports at the University of Florence and at the University of Milan, wherever she gained her BA and MA degrees cum laude. Her latest interest in this new Italian art scene is related to her master’s diploma thesis (defended in March 2020) entitled “Young Italian Artwork “in Milan (1984-1986). Her publications are devoted to those key research matters (Artwork of the 1980s and 1990s, heritage of exhibitions) but she is also definitely fascinated in the neo-avantgardes of the 1960s and 1970s. She actively collaborates with the Office of Artwork Record and Criticism at the University of Milan keeping lectures and seminars. Through the past several years, Giulia has also collaborated with distinct galleries. On top of that, from Oct 2021, she is the Founder and Director of Micro_Mosso, a cultural venture that shares and promotes modern artwork with conferences and Instruction Lab.

As a fellow at CIMA, Giulia will aim on indicating and role of playfulness in Bruno Munari’s action. Bruno Munari has committed a large portion of his inventive action to the act of taking part in: from the development of children’s games and ‘game-books’ to the enhancement of educational workshops that set participating in at the heart of a new method. Giulia will endeavor to trace the evolution of Munari’s approach to the topic all through his vocation, outlining the attributes that exhibit continuity and these that sign change. Also, she will review the doable cultural references that have fostered Munari’s fascination in perform and the progressive recognition of its possible social part.