Ivo Gattin

$ 60

Collection :

Monographs & Artists’ Books

Editor(s) :

Michel Gauthier

Author(s) :

Michel Gauthier

Cover type :

Hardcover

Dimensions :

180 x 250 mm

Pages :

112

Pictures :

70 colors

Price :

CHF25 / €25 / £22 / $30

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Editions :
ISBN :

978-3-03764-642-7

Publication :

Summer 2026

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Rediscovering Ivo Gattin’s Practice

The first volume of a new series of art history publications dedicated to the artistic scenes of former Yugoslavia and entitled “Umjetnost” (“Art”), this publication offers the first comprehensive overview on the life and work of Ivo Gattin (Split, 1926–Zagreb, 1978).

In scarcely more than a decade of genuine artistic activity, Gattin produced one of the most radical oeuvres of his time—not only in Zagreb and the former Yugoslavia, but also on the international stage. From 1956 onward, he pushed the language of Art Informel toward a “degree zero” of painting, before abandoning traditional formats to pursue, at the turn of the 1960s, an uncompromising and extreme “matterism” with no equivalent, for which somber hues, free surfaces, and the play of textures were central. Still largely unknown in the Western art world, Gattin must now take his place alongside the major figures who were his contemporaries—Alberto Burri, Robert Rauschenberg, Lucio Fontana, Gutai, and Anti-Form.

This publication gathers together 50 key representative works that span Gattin’s entire career and aesthetic research, a definitive essay (“The Promises of Matter”) by Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Pompidou Curator Michel Gauthier, that explores the artist’s idiosyncratic practice while framing his oeuvre within the developments of contemporary art of the 1950s–1970s in Yugoslavia as well as internationally, from Jean Dubuffet to Takesada Matsutani.

Born in Split in 1926, Gattin graduated from the Art Academy in Zagreb in 1951. Having produced an unparalleled body of work between 1956 and 1970, living between Zagreb and Milan, he gave up all artistic practice at the beginning of the 1970s before resuming it in 1976 two years before his death in 1978, the year the leading art figure Ješa Denegri organized Gattin’s first retrospective at Nova Gallery, Zagreb.

Published with Centre Pompidou and Les Amis du Centre Pompidou, the “Umjetnost” series will include volumes on Mira Brtka, Ivan Picelj, Exat 51 and New Tendencies, Prostor Oblik, Gorgona, and Olga Jevrić.

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