• 00:24 Introduction
  • 01:46 Returning to drawing from a different place
  • 02:58 An exploration of formats through drawing and the association of ideas
  • 03:36 'Guyana'
  • 05:50 Images and anecdotes: equivalent parts of an open diagram
  • 09:33 History, a source of emblematic cases
  • 10:56 'Buno': the exhibition as a diagram expanded in space
  • 13:50 Manufactured copies as a way of interacting with the archive
  • 16:36 The mimetic copy as a solution: 'The Spirit of the 20th Century'
  • 20:30 A copy protocol and drawing as a legal technique
  • 22:37 The smallest distance between document and copy
  • 24:23 Vector as monument: the encyclopaedia of controversies
  • 26:48 Contemporary art has so far failed to trigger a significant imbalance in its environment
03/11/2014 29' 20''
Spanish

Antonio Gagliano is an artist, writer, editor and curator, and drawing plays a structural or constituent part in all of these aspects of his work.

His practice takes the form of long research processes in which he uses diagrams and sketches as a messy form of assimilation, filtered by affects and by material sourced from archives and from the Internet. He also uses drawing as a strategy with which to get around the legal blocks that are generated by the archives themselves, exploiting the legal limbo of the manufactured copy in a productive way.

SON[I]A talks to Antonio Gagliano about his projects, his relationship to drawing and to mind maps, and about how to generate tools, protocols and blueprints that can help us to navigate the archives and repositories of our time.

Son[i]aAntonio GaglianodrawingarchivediagramNonument

Related RWM programmes