Biography
Francesco
Clemente
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Biography of
Francesco Clemente
Francesco Clemente was born in Naples in 1952,
where he spent his childhood and adolescence in close contact with
seventeenth century art.
After finishing secondary school, he taught himself painting and began to write and publish
poetry. In 1970 he moved to Rome to attend the faculty of Architecture and
met a number of artists including Cy Twombly and Alighiero Boetti, who influenced his
initial artistic work.
He held his first personal exhibition at the Galleria di Valle Giulia in Rome,
then went to India, where he opened a studio in the city of Madras.
In 1979 he joined the Transavantgarde movement, theorised by the critic Achille
Bonito Oliva, and became one of its leading exponents together with Chucchi, Chia, De Maria and
Paladino, with whom he put on an exhibition in Cologne.
From the 1980s onwards he achieved major international success at a time in history
when artists were reacting against the dominant conceptual movement.
He created a series inspired by the stations of the cross, produced numerous books,
a collection of photographs of architecture and a group of miniatures painted in
collaboration with the Indian artists of Madras.
In 1981 he moved to New York, where he now lives and works. He frequently
puts on personal exhibitions in Europe and in the United States. The one held in the Galleria
dArte Moderna in Bologna is a foretaste of the major exhibition that
the Guggenheim Museum in New York will be devoting to him next autumn.
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