Selected Collections:
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Museo Guggenheim, Venice: The museum holds a significant number of works related to the Venetian Optical Art and Kinetic Art movements, which include pieces by Biasi.
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Museo d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto (MART): This museum in northern Italy features works from several avant-garde Italian artists, including Biasi, who played an important role in the Arte Programmata and Kinetic Art movements.
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Collezione Peggy Guggenheim, Venice: As one of Italy's most renowned modern art collections, this institution often displays works from significant 20th-century movements, and Biasi’s work is occasionally featured here in exhibitions on Optical and Kinetic Art.
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Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Rome: This is the national gallery of modern art in Italy, which holds important works from artists involved in post-war Italian avant-garde movements, including Biasi.
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Museo d'Arte Contemporanea di Roma (MACRO): This contemporary art museum often showcases works from Italian artists, and Biasi’s works can sometimes be found as part of exhibitions on kinetic and optical art.
Selected Exhibitions:
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"Gruppo N: The Emergence of Kinetic Art" (2020-2021) – This exhibition, held at the Museo MART in Rovereto, showcased the works of the members of the Gruppo N, with a special focus on Alberto Biasi's experiments with kinetic and optical effects.
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"The Art of Movement: Kinetic and Optical Art" (2018) – This exhibition, hosted by the Guggenheim Museum, explored the evolution of Kinetic and Op Art movements, featuring works from Alberto Biasi along with other artists such as Bridget Riley, Victor Vasarely, and Carlos Cruz-Diez.
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"Alberto Biasi: Opere della Collezione" (2017) – A retrospective of Biasi’s work held at Galleria d'Arte Moderna in Milan. The exhibition displayed a range of his pieces, from early works to more recent explorations in color and movement.
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"Italian Kinetic Art: A Retrospective" (2015) – Held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (MoMA), this exhibition explored the Italian contribution to the Kinetic Art movement, with Alberto Biasi’s work being prominently featured as a key figure in the development of Optical Art.
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"Arte Programmata e Cinetica: Dialoghi Visivi" (2013) – Hosted at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome, this exhibition highlighted the relationship between the Arte Programmata group and the emerging Kinetic Art and Op Art movements, featuring Biasi alongside other significant artists.
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"Biasi e gli Anni '60" (2011) – A focused exhibition at the Museo di Arte Contemporanea di Trento that highlighted Biasi’s major works from the 1960s, during the peak of the Arte Programmata movement.