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concettuali

Concettuali is the plural form of the Italian adjective concettuale, meaning related to concepts, ideas, or theories. In general use, it describes things that emphasize concept over form, content over appearance, or theoretical considerations over material aspects.

In the arts, concettuali commonly refers to conceptual art, a movement that emerged in the 1960s and

In Italy, the conceptual turn of the period brought Italian practitioners into contact with international developments.

Legacy and impact of concettuali include influence on how art is defined, collected, and presented, pushing

1970s.
Artists
associated
with
this
approach
prioritize
the
idea
behind
a
work
rather
than
its
physical
object.
Works
often
foreground
language,
instructions,
documentation,
or
performance,
and
may
take
the
form
of
texts,
scores,
diagrams,
or
installations
that
exist
primarily
as
concepts
or
procedures
rather
than
conventional
artworks.
Notable
Italian
figures
linked
to
conceptual
approaches
include
Giulio
Paolini
and
Piero
Manzoni,
among
others.
Their
work
helped
integrate
conceptual
strategies
with
Italian
artistic
debates
of
the
time,
including
questions
about
authorship,
language,
and
the
role
of
institutions.
museums
and
critics
to
rethink
the
relationship
between
idea
and
object.
The
term
remains
in
use
to
describe
works,
practices,
or
discourses
that
foreground
concept
as
the
essential
aspect
of
art,
as
well
as
in
broader
discussions
of
theory-driven
creativity
in
design,
philosophy,
and
cultural
studies.
See
also
Arte
concettuale.