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One day in the early Sixties, in the course of my daily
duties, I chanced upon an old five-liter, double-vessel Bergomi gasoline pump, abandoned in a sand
quarry, in pitiable condition.
I decided immediately to recuperate and restore it, and since that moment more than thirty
years ago, work and hobby now intermingled, I have been
able to put together a collection which the experts of industrial art judge to be unique and particularly rich.
Now that the
rather haphazardly assembled collection has been organized
and properly structured, I can take the time to formally thank
Alfredo Cattaneo, who helped me in my researches, and
Giuseppe Croce who, more concretely, executed the restoration work.
And here I would allow myself some observations.
The signs, the gasoline cans, the globes, the toys and the
other objects which form the supporting cast for the true
stars of the museum - the pumps themselves - do not serve
merely as pleasing esthetic appendages to the industrial
arts, but are important witnesses to the rapidity of change.
Industrial production, by its nature, quickly consumes its own
products in order to make way for newer, more beautiful,
more efficient ones.
To recuperate the past; to document the
history of technical improvements; to confer, among other
things, an esthetic dignity often unacknowledged as a result
of a prejudice against the serial production of industrial objects - these have been the objectives of the past thirty years
of impassioned research, and they remain as such even now
that the disposition of the collection in a museum context allows a much clearer historical and esthetic reading of the collection as a whole, and of the individual objects of which it is
constituted.
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