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Francesco Clemente: Travel Diary

Vito Schnabel Gallery – 455 West 19th Street, New York

JAN 28 – APR 18, 2026

a painting of a woman in a pink dress with buttons falling off the bottom

Francesco Clemente

The Artificial Princess, 2012

Mixed media on canvas

118 x 79 inches (299.7 x 200.7 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting on denim of a face with hands cuffed with a heart lock

Francesco Clemente

Liberation Self-Portrait, 2001

Mixed media on denim

170 3/4 x 174 inches (433.7 x 442 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente, Birthday Self-Portrait, 2001

Francesco Clemente

Birthday Self-Portrait, 2001

Mixed media on denim

163 x 171 1/4 inches (414 x 435 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of a tree house with a white flag hanging off the top

Francesco Clemente

My Tree House, 2015-2016

Mixed media on canvas

93 x 78 inches (236.2 x 198.1 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of four colorful pillars sitting on top of four skulls

Francesco Clemente

Gandhara Dream, 2012

Pigment on linen

91 x 112 inches (231.1 x 284.5 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a large and colorful painting of flowers

Francesco Clemente

Winter Flowers in Spring II, 2025

Milk paint and ink on canvas

115 1/2 x 193 inches (293.4 x 490.2 cm) overall

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of a red lock box with angel wings

Francesco Clemente

Wings of Desire V, 2022

Oil on canvas

78 x 93 inches (198.1 x 236.2 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of a woman standing on one leg, with the land and sea split behind her

Francesco Clemente

Dormiveglia I, 1998

Oil on canvas

128 x 64 inches (325.1 x 162.6 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of animals atop a Greek-style temple built on an Egyptian boat, floating on a sea of Sanskrit

Francesco Clemente

The Ark, 2012

Pigment on linen

96 x 144 inches (243.8 x 365.8 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of a brick wall with a dove-shaped hole in it, revealing a cloudy blue sky

Francesco Clemente

The Sky on the Wall, 2012

Pigment on linen

112 x 91 inches (284.5 x 231.1 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

a painting of two figures with angel wings holding each other

Francesco Clemente

Wings of Desire IX, 2022

Oil on canvas

78 x 93 inches (198.1 x 236.2 cm)

© Francesco Clemente

A painting of an eight spoked wheel with a bird atop a skull in the center

Francesco Clemente
Trungpa, 2012
Mixed media on canvas
91 x 92 inches (231.1 x 233.7 cm)
© Francesco Clemente

Press Release

Vito Schnabel Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of Francesco Clemente: Travel Diary on January 28, 2026 in New York. The exhibition, featuring works made over the last twenty-eight years, will be on view at the gallery’s Chelsea location through April 18, 2026. 

The idea of taking a journey has always been central to Clemente’s artistic practice as both a theme and a goal. His visual language draws upon the emblems and symbols of both Eastern and Western mystical traditions, reanimating them through personal experiences. Exploring themes of identity, spirituality, and mythology, Clemente’s work is distinguished by a rich use of allegory, symbolism, and iconography inspired by his extensive travels throughout India, Afghanistan, China, Brazil, North Africa, and the Caribbean. 

Each work in Travel Diary relates to a different place and a distinct experience of the past. The past is essential, for it indicates responsibility. Without responsibility, the artist cannot invent the future, nor sustain the hope that emerges from imagining it. As Clemente notes, “Today, hope in the future may be the only sensible political act that remains.”

The question arises: does Clemente travel in search of a home, or in an effort to leave behind the notion of a home? In this exhibition, home appears as a tree house in his painting, My Tree House (2015-16). Upon it, Clemente raises a white flag– a gesture of surrender to the cruelty of life, and at the same time, to the sweetness of painting and its redemptive power. 

The earliest painting in the exhibition, Dormiveglia I, is from the artist’s 1998 series which takes its title from an Italian expression describing the state of consciousness that lies between sleep and awakening. The towering canvas is reminiscent of a tarot card, featuring a fragmented body of a goddess-like figure. Among the other early works are two monumental pieces from 2001, which are painted with the white paint of street signage on denim and were inspired by a group of works the artist encountered in Genoa. Attributed to the school of Giulio Romano, these were created to cover the walls of a church for a single day each year, on Good Friday. 

Gandhara Dream (2012) takes its title from Gandhara sculptures – Hellenistic works produced in present-day Afghanistan approximately two thousand years ago. In another work, The Ark (2012), Noah’s Ark drifts across a sea of Sanskrit letters drawn from an ancient text from around the same time. Trungpa (2012) features an eight-spoked wheel borrowed from the Buddhist tradition. In the center of the painting, a small, defenseless bird holds a brush in his beak atop a human skull. The bird appears in red alone, amidst a background of oxide copper green birds; perhaps an analogy for the artist.

The most recent painting in the exhibition, Winter Flowers in Spring II (2025), reaffirms the artist’s belief that somewhere in the coldness of times of destruction, something beautiful may be coming to life. 

On the occasion of the exhibition, a catalogue will be published on the last seven years of collaboration between Francesco Clemente and Vito Schnabel Gallery. The book features an essay by Joachim Pissarro and an in depth conversation between Francesco Clemente and artist Kiki Smith. 

 

About the Artist

Francesco Clemente was born in 1952 in Naples, Italy. He studied architecture at the Università degli Studi di Roma, La Sapienza in Rome in 1970, before turning his focus instead to art.

In the late 1970s and early ‘80s, at a time when painting had been declared obsolete, Clemente’s work– together with other artists of his generation– played a significant role in the revival of the medium. After moving to New York in the 1980s, Clemente pioneered, through his nomadic lifestyle, the image of the artist engaged globally. He is a master of the many mediums that fall within the tradition of paintings, from fresco to watercolor to oil and mixed media pigments on canvas.

Clemente’s work has been presented at numerous international institutions, including Nationalgalerie, Berlin; Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel; Philadelphia Museum of Art; Royal Academy of Arts, London; Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Bologna; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Guggenheim Museum Bilbao; Sezon Museum of Art, Tokyo; Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli; and Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence.

His work is featured in many prominent museum collections worldwide, including the Albertina Museum, Vienna; Art Institute of Chicago; Miami Art Museum; Kunstmuseum Basel; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Guggenheim Museum Bilbao; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York.

Francesco Clemente lives and works in New York, Chennai, and Varanasi, India.