PROJECTS

King Birds of Paradise dalla serie “The Growing Garden”

2008

This work in The Growing Garden series, created with the screen painting technique, stems from the sense of wonder brought about by being able to use powerful electron microscopes to gain access to the secret world. Nature is not just physis, nature, it is also kosmos, order: we live in a dimension that has its own intrinsic order that enables it to flourish and regenerate itself. These vital and delicate textures convey a sense of precarious beauty and recall the interlacing of branches in a refined garden. I also inserted birds of paradise on the branches. Some are painted, while others, in motion, are created by computer graphics in such a way that the two dimensions overlap and blend, continuing to question our perception.

The Growing Garden

I created a series of works as part of The Growing Garden project, since the nanoworld brought me into contact with completely new images, obtained with the most powerful optical microscopes, evoking ambiguous landscapes, alienating places that recall reality in its fragmentation.

Continuing a line of research that I had undertaken in 1983 with In Corporea Mente, I wondered about the transformation of forms, their unfolding from microcosm to macrocosm. The branched structure of a mineral, for example, is similar in shape and process of aggregation to the peripheral region of a neuron or the atomic structure of some polymers or, again, to the conformation of a tree or coral. I therefore penetrated, through these scientific images, into wonderful woods and dust clouds, which I wanted to rework in 3D, animating each of them with a series of creatures taken from the animal or vegetable world that I painted directly on the screen or canvas, multiplying the image as if it were a Zen ritual. The paradox consists of the fact that the pictorial image is the bearer of a uniqueness and, therefore, of a different DNA for each. If, through self-replication (a powerful promise of nanotechnology), cells build copies of themselves by abolishing diversity, I wanted to follow the opposite procedure: through what is seemingly identical I sought to reanimate the differences.