On the occasion of Seasons, Maurizio Cattelan's exhibition at   GAMeC, art historian Lisa Parola, investigates how contemporary art can   redefine the idea of the monument: no longer an immobile place of   celebration, but a critical space of removal and transformation,   promoting new relationships with both history and the present.
	Parola   reflects on the changing concept of the monument and how cultural   institutions choose to deal with layered and sometimes contradictory   symbols. Lorenzo Giusti, curator of the exhibition, accompanies the   essay with an insight on the works presented in order to show how, in   Cattelan's work, symbols stratify, shift, and contradict each other. How   the imperial eagle becomes a vulnerable body; how the   nineteenth-century statue dedicated to Garibaldi is turned into a   pedestal for something else. Who? A grandson on his grandfather's   shoulders? A new Garibaldian? Or a little vandal mocking ancient values?   By so doing, he notes how between history and nature, cracks,   fractures, and new possibilities may be opened up.
	After 
Rachel Whiteread by Angelo Antonio Moroni and Pietro Roberto Goisis and 
Sonia Boyce by Brandon LaBelle and 
Ernesto Neto by Emanuele Coccia, 
You Don't Make a Masterpiece... is the fourth book in a series of short   essay collections inspired by   the site-specific art projects specially   conceived for GAMeC at   Palazzo della Ragione, a symbolic, time-honored   location within the   city of Bergamo that embodies the values of   community life and   participation. The artist was asked to name an author   who interests   her—be it a researcher, a philosopher or a scholar—and   whose thinking   could be said to underpin the project, with a view to   finding a path   through the complexities of the present day, starting   from the work   produced but without necessarily lingering on it. 
 
		Lorenzo Giusti (Ph.D) is an Italian art historian, curator and writer, director of 
GAMeC in Bergamo.
 
		Lisa Parola, graduated in History of Modern Art from the University of Turin, is the co-author of publications and research works, particularly on the themes related to cultural politics, the contemporary art system, public space and territory.
		Hailed simultaneously as a provocateur,   prankster, and tragic poet of our times, Maurizio Cattelan (born 1960 in Padova, Italy,  lives in New York and Milan) has created  some of the most unforgettable images in recent contemporary art. His  source materials range widely, from popular culture, history, and  organized religion to a meditation on the self that is at once humorous  and profound. Working in a vein that can be described as hyperrealist,  Cattelan creates unsettlingly veristic sculptures that reveal  contradictions at the core of today's society. While bold and  irreverent, the work is also deadly serious in its scathing critique of authority and the abuse of power.
Maurizio Cattelan 
is one of the leading 
contemporary artist and his works are much desired collector's items that often reach 
astronomically high prices at auction sales—although the artist is not dead yet.
He runs the artist's magazine 
Permanent Food, 
Charley and 
Toilet Paper.