Marino Iotti

Marino Iotti

Marino Iotti was born in Reggio Emilia in 1954, and while still very young he began a pictorial journey that would come to interest such authors as Achille Bonito Oliva, Claudio Cerritelli, Giuseppe Berti, Marinella Paderni, Massimo Mussini and Sandro Parmiggiani. He learned the technical basics by attending courses that Prof. Giulio Soriani held at the Piccola Accademia di Regina Pacis, and later with sculptor Ugo Sterpini.

In 1978 he began his exhibition activity in Scandiano (RE) with “Studio aperto,” a studio/gallery that was intended to be a point of encounter and comparison among artists. Although increasingly fascinated by aniconic painting, Iotti devoted part of the early 1980s to the study of 20th-century Italian painting. He painted numerous portraits with a strong psychological imprint, drawing inspiration from artists such as Casorati, Funi, and Sironi. Study that allows the artist to strengthen his technical skills. But it is with artists such as Graham Sutherland and Giacometti that the gradual shift to a language that is at first symbolic (with themes such as ecology and horror at war) and then shifts to abstract/formal painting takes place.
The incessant search is the datum that characterizes all Marino Iotti’s work; a continuous search, never forced and always becoming, a passionate study of the subtle balances that color and sign can still convey.

In the last decade he began collaborating with Saletta Galaverni in Reggio Emilia, where he presented two solo shows in 2004 and 2009, and with Nickel Gallery in Seebruck, Germany, where he exhibited in 2002 and 2004 plus other group shows.
Other significant exhibitions: in 2002 “Infinite Voci” in the Fortress of Scandiano; in 2005 “Quel nulla di inesauribile segreto” Church of the Madonna in Cast Sotto; in 2007 “Racconti interiori” Spazio Tadini in Milan; in 2008 “Nel segno della Natura” Headquarters of the Stelvio National Park – Prato allo Stelvio (Bz); in 2011 ” Resonances of the Visible” Chiostri di San Domenico Reggio Emilia, “The complexity of the fragment” Galleria Meridiana, Pietrasanta – “Scartches” Galleria Marelia, Bergamo; in 2012, “90 artists for one flag” Chiostri di San Domenico Reggio Emilia, Palazzo Ducale di Modena, Complesso del Vittoriano, Rome 2013; in 2014 Triennale di Roma; Galleria 13, Reggio Emilia.

Marino Iotti in the studio

Painting works in the gallery

20 X 20

Marino Iotti’s poetics is directly linked to the historicized masters of the Italian and international abstract-informal movement, yet finds its own originality imbued with lyricism and musicality. Music in fact is the leading motif of an authentic “making painting,” which takes its cue from the surrounding landscape and reworks it with thought. A mode played on the stratifications of wood, matter, painted fabrics that go to assemble in geometric compositions and pieces of color, showing an excellent compositional balance. Paintings like “notebooks,” like notes taken from life in everyday life, sketches imprinted on canvas that go on to compose day after day the finished work in the painter’s studio.

In 1994, Gallery 13 proposed that modern painter Franco Rognoni exclusively create oil paintings in a 20x20cm format. The idea, in contrast to the widespread tendency to make larger and larger works, wanted to address the issue of the lack of space in small middle-class living rooms, and at the same time, demonstrate that it was possible to make works of great quality and refinement even in small sizes, which is actually not easy.
The problem of space is still a topical issue, so it was decided to pose this challenge again, but in a contemporary key, to the painter Marino Iotti, who made fifty “20×20” paintings for us.
These small masterpieces have been collected in a catalog raisonné, with critical text by Sandro Parmiggiani, printed in 500 numbered copies.

Critical texts

From the catalog “Natural Silences”
by Achille Bonito Oliva, 2013

Talking about silence is a bit like violating it, but sometimes putting one’s interiority in front of words, with shrewd delicacy to arouse desire, often repressed, is also the way to give breath to one’s soul beyond the narrow and agitated everyday realms, toward great horizons that evoke Nature, the infinite.

Modern culture tends to persuade us that we can know everything and dominate everything. Human reason seems to have lost its sense of its own measure and has somehow contaminated with its claim to omnipotence even the sphere of visual arts, where the presence of Mystery is less and less experienced and welcomed.

It is precisely the inner Silence that can dilate the soul to the point of making it capable of welcoming the silence of Nature and all those places of the soul that bring us back to it. The formal decomposition in Marino Iotti’s works is never violent. In his blunt and light geometries in the choice of elegant tones sometimes veiled and transparent that allow a glimpse of rougher signs. In this play of colors lines and shapes seem to emerge primitive anthropomorphic figures, sometimes ancestral graffiti. These works continue an original research in the fascinating dimension of informal.

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