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▶ Michelange­lo Pistoletto returns to the UAE landmark with a new series, bending space and blending narratives, writes Mirrored paintings are a reflection of history between continents, their Italian creator and Louvre museums

- Razmig Bedirian

Mirrors have long held our collective hopes and fears in their silver depths. For the great Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges, they were the madness of the infinite. In the Brothers Grimm fairy tale Snow White, the magic mirror was the voice of truth. In her lauded A Room

of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf writes: “Whatever may be their use in civilised societies, mirrors are essential to all violent and heroic action.”

For Italian artist Michelange­lo Pistoletto, mirrors are a fragile means to defy time and space. His mirror paintings at Louvre Abu Dhabi connect the museum, its artworks and visitors with its older Parisian sibling.

They are displayed across the permanent galleries of the museum, but the mirror paintings can easily be missed at first glance. Depicting ancient sculptures, the work is camouflage­d within the space, making them difficult to spot amid the surroundin­g pieces.

The paintings, which come as part of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s fifth anniversar­y celebratio­ns are on display until May 15. They continue from Year 1,

Paradise on Earth, the 2013 work Pistoletto created for Louvre Museum in the French capital. For Louvre Abu Dhabi, the artist created 11 mirror works depicting visitors and works from the collection in Paris. The aim, Pistoletto says, was to create a dialogue between one Louvre and another.

“When I take a photograph of a sculpture, I can transport it to another place through my mirror paintings,” he tells The

National. “That sculpture will then be connected to another place. You have in Abu Dhabi the works that are in Paris. Now, I would like to make a series in Paris featuring sculptures and viewers and the people of Abu Dhabi. I want to transport them to Paris.”

Most of Pistoletto’s mirror paintings are composed around a series of opposition­s: between people of the past and those of the present, between the nude and clothed body, and between a body of flesh and one of stone.

“The paintings are composed by a mirror surface and an image taken by photograph­y. With technology, it was painted [or printed] on the mirror,” Pistoletto says.

“It is reflecting the viewer, the space. It is of the realities existing through the mirror.” Louvre + 1 Mirror Paintings,

Pistoletto says, also covers the three aspects of time: past (photograph­y), present (reflection in the mirror) and future (the photograph­y becoming the memory of a moment that follows all succeeding moments).

“We have the dimension of time, the dimension of history,” he explains.

“When you put the work in a museum, you have a reflection of the history of the museum. We can see not only the history, but also the present and the viewer is included in the history and takes it into the future.”

Pistoletto is renowned for smashing his mirror paintings after his exhibition­s conclude. He takes a sledgehamm­er to them, shattering their bottomless silver and suggestion­s of infinity. However, he did not specify whether he would do the same for the works at Louvre Abu Dhabi.

Louvre + 1 Mirror Paintings

is not the first work Pistoletto has displayed at Louvre Abu Dhabi. As part of the Stories of Paper exhibition, which was displayed during summer last year, the artist presented his monumental Labirinto

e Grande Pozzo installati­on, a snaking labyrinth of cardboard.

“The labyrinth was a way to make people enter the work physically,” he says.

“The viewer is not just looking but is included in the work of art, moving inside of it.”

We see not only history, but also the present and the viewer is included in the history and takes it into the future MICHELANGE­LO PISTOLETTO Artist

Louvre + 1 Mirror Paintings will be on display at Louvre Abu Dhabi until May 15

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 ?? Galleria Continua; Victor Besa / The National ?? Top, the artworks symbolise Louvre Abu Dhabi’s role as a convergenc­e point for ages and civilisati­ons; above, Labirinto e Grande Pozzo installati­on
Galleria Continua; Victor Besa / The National Top, the artworks symbolise Louvre Abu Dhabi’s role as a convergenc­e point for ages and civilisati­ons; above, Labirinto e Grande Pozzo installati­on

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