This publication assembles twenty years worth of social, aesthetic and philosophical reflexions that essentially place the individual within the contemporary community.
Piero Gilardi (1942-2023) was a pioneer of
Arte Povera and a proud advocate of an ecological-concerned undertaking in visual arts. He was a peripatetic artist who gathered information about experimental art and creators in the 1960s, promoting the work of Richard Long or Jan Dibbets, and introducing Bruce Nauman or
Eva Hesse into Europe. He was also a political activist who marched with FIAT workers in the 1970s, and who founded, in the 2000s the Living Art Park, commissioning earthworks to contemporary artists such as
Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster or
Lara Almarcegui.
For all this and for much more—his design and fashion creations, his social endeavors, etc.—Piero Gilardi is emblematic of the evolutions of art and society since the mid-20th century. He was an artist whose works and theoretical researches are still relevant to map what art could achieve and how art could be useful in the "real world."