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General Assembly is pleased to present Ercolina, a solo presentation of sculptural works by Salvatore Pione. Reflecting on his relationship with himself, and the connections that have shaped his life, Pione explores themes of strength and vulnerability, the courage required to live authentically, and the tenderness within this.
Ercolina, takes its title from a bodybuilding machine that forces the user into a posture with arched legs and a protruding buttocks. Designed to accentuate the masculine body, the position required to use the machine reveals an unexpected fragility. Hyper-masculine bodies, meant to embody an ideal of ultimate virility, apparently mock themselves. The machine’s name recalls Hercules, an ancient and universal symbol of strength and masculinity, but with a twist: Ercolina, is the feminine form.
Pione draws inspiration from the architectural elements of his native Sicily, gates and fences are a recuring motif. The artist plays on the ambiguity of elegant cages that capture the eye, but symbolically, confine the self. Pione questions at what point a sense of security becomes a limitation, and further, when the barrier itself becomes a refuge, protection from judgement and failure. Through cracks in these iron structures, fragile, carved tulip wood flowers bloom. Like audacious and delicate acts of resistance, these flowers spring to life.
Ercolina is a tender, courageous, celebration of the freedom to love and live authentically, a freedom that, in its purity, is also deeply vulnerable. Pione summons’ the viewer to examine the cages we build around ourselves. Ercolina is an invitation, to recognize the gates, and to look beyond them.
Ercolina: Salvatore Pione
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