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#3 Nobel Explosion


Past Forward, curated by Alessandro Romanini, Fondazione Centro Arti Visive, Pietrasanta.
May - June 2013





#2 Nobel Explosion

Nobel Explosion & anti-hail rockets, curated by Marina Sorbello, Uqbar Projektraum, Berlin
November 2012 – January 2013




Every abandoned building tells a story and every story has its mysterious side. When we drive along a road or walk in the country we often glimpse slightly scary old ruined buildings. This might make us wonder about their history.

Travelling along Tyrhennian coast of Italy, following in the steps of Pier Paolo Pasolini in his Alfa Romeo Giulietta, a series of buildings completely covered with brambles, near to the Forte dei Marmi, caught my eye. Once I had discovered who the buildings used to belong to: SIPE Nobel (Italian Explosives Company, in partnership with Alfred Nobel), the buildings took on a completely new meaning. I began to find other similar buildings along the coast and subsequent research revealed more buildings in other parts of Italy, all in a similarly abandoned state, polluted with dangerous chemicals and with no plans to clean up the land to make it safe to use again. These buildings were used to produce explosives, dynamite, gunpowder and rockets.

Alfred Nobel was a man of many talents: on the one hand he developed explosives for civil use and on the other he developed arms, cannons and other instruments of death for the many wars between the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century.

Some of the places visited are real industrial archaeology sites and my explorations often took on the character of Andrei Tarkovski's Stalker, driven by an uncontrollable desire to delve into the depths of their history.

The buildings at Spilamberto are still full of abandoned SIPE Nobel documents, going as far back as the Fascist period. There are wage slips for men and women and maps with engineering projects designed to be built on new sites. The most recent papers relate to anti-hail rockets, developed in the 60s.

The exhibition at Uqbar documented the old dynamite factories of the SIPE Nobel Company, originally founded by Albert Nobel in Italy. One part of the exhibition comprised photos of the industrial ruins of the SIPE Novel factories along the coast of Tuscany. Another part of the exhibition showed photos of the industrial ruins at Lastra Signa, in the centre of Tuscany. Another part of the exhibition showed photos of the industrial ruins at Lastra Signa, in the centre of Tuscany and objects created with found material.

In the framework of this research, I would like to mention that research carried out by Swedish investigative journalist, John Bergendorff, indicates that even today the Nobel Foundation’s record is not unblemished. In recent years luxury trips to Japan and China, for many of the members of the committee, paid for by the respective governments, were followed by a Japanese and Chinese Nobel prizes.

Robert Pettena, Angela Paine








#1 Nobel Explosion

Noble Explosion, curated by Emily Barsi & P.E Antognoli Viti, Lucca.
2010


© Robert Pettena 2022