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'Infinite Vanitas' by Pier Alfeo and Saskia Fischer at Ex Chiesa di San Giuseppe, Conversano

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Pier Alfeo, Hypodérmide, 2017
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Pier Alfeo, Hypodérmide, 2017
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Pier Alfeo, Hypodérmide, 2017
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Pier Alfeo, Hypodérmide
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Pier Alfeo, Hypodérmide, 2017
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Pier Alfeo, Hypodérmide, 2017
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Saskia Fischer, Pinhole 17_X and Pinhole 17_VIII, 2017
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Saskia Fischer, Pinhole 17_VIII, 2017
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Saskia Fischer, Pinhole 17_VIII, 2017
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Saskia Fischer, Pinhole 17_X, 2017

It is striking that the well-known biblical affirmation “Vanitas vanitatum et omnia vanitatis” (vanity of vanities, all is vanity), which reminds people of the futility of material goods, has been a such powerful source of inspiration for art, the most vane and futile human activity. The vanitas has been indeed one of the most represented subject in the western painting, creating an immensely prolific imaginary. Hourglasses, cut flowers, music instruments, skulls: a complex system of images and symbols mobilised with the aim of highlighting the vanity of the earthly life. It seems that art reaches its highest expressiveness exactly when it represents its own vanity and the one of the world which it belongs to.

In On the Pre-eminent Dignity of the Arts of Fire, the French poet Paul Valéry describes the fascination of fire as that which better represents the artistic experience: despite being ephemeral, exactly like art, fire generates intense sensations, anything but ephemeral. Further, fire quickly consumes itself and is constantly under the threat of vanishing. It is this ungraspable instant before the vanishing of the image that Pinhole 17_VIII e Pinhole 17_X by Saskia Fischer capture. Not only the cut flower directly recalls the iconography of the vanitas, but this is also evoked by the dematerialisation of the image itself in the flow of time.

The ineluctable flow of time is a theme addressed also by the sound installation Hypodèrmide by Pier Alfeo. The slowly flowing water, that could stop at any moment, induces the same anxiety caused by hourglasses in 17th century paintings, which warn us that the course of events will eventually come to an end. The electronic sounds produced by the work seem indeed to be echoing from another world.

Infinite Vanitas takes place on the verge between two worlds: one that is about to disappear, the other that has not yet disappeared.

19.12.17 — 7.1.18

Curated by Valentina Iacovelli and Felice Moramarco

Ex Chiesa di San Giuseppe

'ABSINTHE', Group Show Curated by PLAGUE at Smena, Kazan

'Pupila' by Elizabeth Burmann Littin at Two seven two gallery, Toronto

'Auxiliary Lights' by Kai Philip Trausenegger at Bildraum 07, Vienna

'Inferno' by Matthew Tully Dugan at Lomex, New York

'Зamok', Off-Site Group Project at dentistry Dr. Blumkin, Moscow

'Dog, No Leash', Group Show at Spazio Orr, Brescia

'Syllables in Heart' by Thomas Bremerstent at Salgshallen, Oslo

'Out-of-place artifact', Off-Site Project by Artem Briukhov in Birsk Fortress, Bi

'Gardening' by Daniel Drabek at Toni Areal, Zurich

'HALF TRUTHS', Group Show at Hackney Road, E2 8ET, London

'Unknown Unknowns' by Christian Roncea at West End, The Hague

'Thinking About Things That Are Thinking' by Nicolás Lamas at Meessen De Clercq,

‘Funny / Sad’, Group Show by Ian Bruner, Don Elektro & Halo, curated by Rhizome P

'Don’t Die', Group Show at No Gallery, New York

'Almost Begin' by Bronson Smillie at Afternoon Projects, Vancouver

'I'll Carry Your Heart's Gray Wing with a Trembling Hand to My Old Age', Group Sh

'hapy like a fly' by Clément Courgeon at Colette Mariana, Barcelona

'Fear of the Dark' by Jack Evans at Soup, London

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