The exhibition is entirely devoted to investigate the possible interactions between the different elements.
Starting from September 28th until October 26th at White Noise Gallery, six internationally renowned artists will present their works, all linked by their constant hovering between scientific rigour and pure empathy. They will distort the space perception through luminescent artworks, appearing like unexpected questions in the dark. As stated by Carlo Rovelli, quantum mechanics and experiments with particles have taught us that the world is a continuous, restless swarming of things, a continuous coming to light and disappearance of ephemeral entities. Ours is a world of happenings, not of things. STRINGS. LIGHT AND VISION is intent to investigate light as an event and to explore the different ways artists have used it as a medium.
The path starts with the work of Alessandro Simonini, showing a neon tetragram putting together two deliberately opposed interpretations of INRI.
Andrea Galvani presents a glowing landscape -both abstract and physical- describing the engine that powers the stars. His cosmic equations, similar to a starry night sky, represent a guide for land navigation. A cloud of numbers where mathematics appears as a hyper-object, the Universe, summoned and summarised.
Isabel Alonso Vega presents her minimalist alchemy, enclosed into plexiglass cases. Overlaid gold coats become sculptural elements thanks to the presence of light. When passing through and filling them, it creates an ephemeral illusion.
Mareo Rodriguez investigates matter as a form of light condensation and questions its process of transformation and expansion of energy through time. M.E.L.T.S. is an artwork clarified by its own title: Matter energy space light time.
Sali Muller with her concept art researches the role of human being compared to himself and his own environment. The role of darkness represents a dimension of natural alienation from the image of nature and ourselves.
The exhibition STRINGS. LIGHT AND VISION recounting the history of a physical phenomenon drives us towards a psychological abstraction, existing in various forms in all the aspects of our lives. Light is the first thing we see when opening our eyes as new-borns; a timeless moment where identity and memory are not yet defined.