Roma – After the public success of Flowers. From the Renaissance to artificial intelligencean even more lush nature is about to color the spaces of the Bramante Monastery.
The new chapter, scheduled from Saturday, March 14 to Sunday, September 6, is called Flowers. Beautiful natureand is presented, albeit independently, in consultation with the Kunsthalle Munich and Suzanne Landau.
Built in continuity with Flowers, the path evolves and broadens the view. While in the first chapter the focus of reflection was on the flower as a symbolic, political and poetic element, in the new exhibition the view broadens to nature in its totality, conceived as an organic and changing universe in which plant and animal forms, marine elements and different species interact with each other in a dynamic balance. To enhance the content, further loans will be made from Italian collections, from the Casanatense Library to the Tosio Martinengo Art Gallery in Brescia and from the Civic Museum of Zoology in Rome. The exhibition route will be divided into three macro sections: Art and ecology, Art and science, Art and politics – in a close dialogue between ancient and contemporary works, and will be built on a continuous play of references and connections.
The protagonists will be national and international artists with works ranging from the seventeenth century to the present, including contributions made with artificial intelligence. Visitors will recognize some highlights from the first chapter, such as the site-specific installations of Austin Young and Zadok Ben-David.
Thanks to loans from the Civil Museum of Zoology of Rome and the Capitoline Superintendent, the diorama dedicated to the Oceans and the Bavarian Forest will be present in the itinerary, in dialogue with Enter the Plastocene by Tamiko Thiel and Sunday afternoon 02 by Eugenio Tibaldi and with the 17th and 18th century works of Margherita Caffi and Pietro Neri Scacciati. An unpublished core of works by Israeli artist Zadok Ben-David will broaden reflection on biodiversity, ecosystem fragility and collective responsibility.
The new chapter, scheduled from Saturday, March 14 to Sunday, September 6, is called Flowers. Beautiful natureand is presented, albeit independently, in consultation with the Kunsthalle Munich and Suzanne Landau.
Built in continuity with Flowers, the path evolves and broadens the view. While in the first chapter the focus of reflection was on the flower as a symbolic, political and poetic element, in the new exhibition the view broadens to nature in its totality, conceived as an organic and changing universe in which plant and animal forms, marine elements and different species interact with each other in a dynamic balance. To enhance the content, further loans will be made from Italian collections, from the Casanatense Library to the Tosio Martinengo Art Gallery in Brescia and from the Civic Museum of Zoology in Rome. The exhibition route will be divided into three macro sections: Art and ecology, Art and science, Art and politics – in a close dialogue between ancient and contemporary works, and will be built on a continuous play of references and connections.
The protagonists will be national and international artists with works ranging from the seventeenth century to the present, including contributions made with artificial intelligence. Visitors will recognize some highlights from the first chapter, such as the site-specific installations of Austin Young and Zadok Ben-David.
Thanks to loans from the Civil Museum of Zoology of Rome and the Capitoline Superintendent, the diorama dedicated to the Oceans and the Bavarian Forest will be present in the itinerary, in dialogue with Enter the Plastocene by Tamiko Thiel and Sunday afternoon 02 by Eugenio Tibaldi and with the 17th and 18th century works of Margherita Caffi and Pietro Neri Scacciati. An unpublished core of works by Israeli artist Zadok Ben-David will broaden reflection on biodiversity, ecosystem fragility and collective responsibility.
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