ROBERTA SILVA.STUDIO CASOLI As communication spreads via the Internet and computers, the resistance to declaring one's emotional horizons crumbles. This is not "postmodern neo-romanticism," but rather the freedom to give shape, symbol, interpretation to the tie between mind and body, sentiment and reason. In recent years some astute theoretical interpretations have appeared in feminist thought with regard to this subject, and now the visual arts visual arts npl → artes fpl plásticas visual arts npl → arts mpl plastiques visual arts npl → are announcing that women and men need figures and signs to give a name to this change. Knowledge means knowing the emotions, keeping them in a form that neither sanctifies nor monumentalizes them, but reveals the multiform multiform /mul·ti·form/ (mul´ti-form) polymorphic. mul·ti·form adj. Occurring in or having many forms or shapes; polymorphic. and unstable profile of their physical life. Roberta Silva Roberta Silva (born 1971) is an artist based in Milan and Lake Garda. Silva was born in Trinidad and Tobago. She works mainly with sculpture[1], installation and site-specific interventions. has said: "I never repress re·press v. 1. To hold back by an act of volition. 2. To exclude something from the conscious mind. my childhood memories," but the "text" that she laid out here was very different from a memory that might be entered in a diary. In the first room, two large sculptures of transparent natural resin Noun 1. natural resin - a plant exudate sandarach, sandarac - a brittle and faintly aromatic translucent resin used in varnishes guaiacum - medicinal resin from the lignum vitae tree , entitled Lacrime d'artista (Tears of the artist), 1998-2000, welcomed the viewer, but they ha d nothing to do with a stereotype of grief. There was something playful and theatrical about the work: two rears, positioned at the artist's own eye level; two waterfalls crystallized crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es v.tr. 1. on the floor. The liquid that springs from crying becomes a workable material with its own consistency, almost a physical testimony to the energy unleashed by a strong, profound feeling that cannot be avoided but is not just a symbol of grief. Sculpture is Silva's passion, and for her, the origins of three-dimensionality lie in light. Thus the second room of her show contained Untitled, 2000, an intermittent electric light placed behind a white Plexiglas insert in a plaster-covered wall so one could not determine just where the light was coming from. Passing through the wall and pulsating like a breath, it imbued the empty space with an emotional physicality, even a sort of poetic intensity. Finally, three other sculptures conveyed a desire to establish stable form without abolishing material flexibility. Titled Mio padre n. I (My father no. I) Mio padre n. 2, and Mio padre n. 3, the works consisted of rolls of transparent PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride. PVC in full polyvinyl chloride Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide. tubing filled with mercury. The invocation of the father combined with this material indicates a feeling not only of the relationship experienced with one's own parents, but of all those encounters in which we recognize germination germination, in a seed, process by which the plant embryo within the seed resumes growth after a period of dormancy and the seedling emerges. The length of dormancy varies; the seed of some plants (e.g. . What child has not played with the mercury contained in thermometers? Fluid, brilliant, impalpable impalpable /im·pal·pa·ble/ (im-pal´pah-b'l) not detectable by touch. impalpable not detectable by touch. as light, it is in reality very heavy, as heavy as the coils of rope that a bricklayer going off to work carries on his back, in a photograph taken by the artist. The design of the sculptures comes from this image of an unknown worker. It seems that Silva found a sense of kinship in the precise, affectionate care that the man dedicated to his work material. Mercury also requires care. It can be dangerous if one doesn't know how to handle it, and i t is very precious, just like the ropes the bricklayer carries on his back. |
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