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Michelangelo Pistoletto was born in Biella in 1933. He began exhibiting in 1955.

Between 1965 and 1966 he produced a set of works entitled 'Oggetti in Meno’, considered fundamental for the genesis of Arte Povera, an artistic movement in which Pistoletto is the creator and protagonist.

In 2008, an important exhibition was inaugurated at Galleria Continua / Beijing, dedicated to the great artist from Biella, to show his art between past, present and future. 

The gallery spaces were dedicated to many of Pistoletto's most important artworks, and it tried to enhance the concept of evolution of style that has followed the artist from the early years of his career, starting from the early sixties.

The solo show, full of important new elements, offered a panoramic and retrospective look at Pistoletto's artistic journey while introducing the artist's aesthetic-conceptual universe.

To occupy the main exhibition space was a five-meter white cube centered in a room where, to reach it, a path was made through a maze of corrugated cardboard The Labyrinth (a poor material that recalls the art movement defined by Germano Celant in the 60s as Arte Povera, of which Pistoletto was one of the chief exponents). The only way of getting to the cube is by going through the maze, a structure from classical mythology that also features in Pistoletto’s Labyrinth, 1969–2001. 

The white cube is lined with mirrors inside. 2100 meters of cardboard were used to build the piece.

In the center of the room, inside the cube entirely covered with mirrors, there was the The Cubic Meter of Infinity, a work belonging to the series in Oggetti in Meno (1965-1966): a simple cube made up of 6 mirror slabs facing inwards towards each other.

The practicable mirroring space thus becomes the space of experience in which the spectator for the first time is invited to confront the sensation of being able to stay inside the cube which, until then, they had been excluded from: The Cubic Meter of Infinity, retains its status as a space of pure imagination.

This succession of works, that continuously recalls each to the other, places Michelangelo Pistoletto’s artistic research in a temporal dimension which includes the past, the present and the future.

In 'Omnitheism and Democracy' Michelangelo Pistoletto said: "The Cubic Meter of Infinity, was conceived by me in 1966. With this work, art becomes a catalyst of all the meanings related to cultures of the present, both religious and not.

The Cubic Meter of Infinity is a physical object that contains the verified phenomenon of the immeasurably infinite. A multiconfessional place exists in reality too and has been handed down to us by history. It is the city of Jerusalem, but it lacks a symbol proposed by art, like The Cubic Meter of Infinity, that might stimulate the attainment of a balance between its political and religious conflicts, which have ruinous consequences for the world as a whole."



Lorenzo Fiaschi, co-founder of Galleria Continua, talks about working with Michelangelo Pistoletto.