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A Date With Infinity
Robb Report Singapore
|March 2019
INFINITY Michelangelo Pistoletto may be 85 this year, but the jovial Italian artist – most known for his Third Paradise symbol and mirrored ‘self-portraits’ – is still firing on all cylinders.

There aren’t many people who can carry offa purple fedora, but Michelangelo Pistoletto is one of them. He wears it as he does his slightly baggy black suit; without a hint of irony, every inch the artist in attendance. His 85-year-old body, despite sporting the ravages of time, has a curious jauntiness. It was always going to be a challenge interviewing a man described by many as one of the greatest conceptual artists of his generation. One imagines that coming up with a question he hasn’t been asked a thousand times will be difficult, while something completely out of left field could irritate, alienate and cause hackles to rise.
We exchange chairs before ‘rolling’ – his was the comfortable one into which he sank almost instantly and looked ill at ease. Mine was more obdurate, with a straight back that gave me an elevation that intuitively felt wrong. We swapped.
“Do you dream in colour or in black and white?” I ask.
“Both,” comes the instant response. “I dream about the ‘new cinema’ that is created in my mind. Basically, all my work is done by my dreams in the night. Not exactly in the dream, perhaps, but at the moment when you stop dreaming and are awake again. The dream is a kind of preparation, a formulation of the problem, and the reawakening opens up the opportunity to a new way of thinking.”
My opening gambit has failed to shock or even surprise. It’s time to get on to safer territory.
Pistoletto was born in 1933, and his father was an artist with his own art restoration business. His mother was, for a time, one of his father’s pupils.
He served an apprenticeship of sorts in his father’s workshop, and was exposed to many different classical forms of art that informed his progress as an artist. It made him realise what kind of artist he didn’t want to be.
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