Alessandro Biggio, Irene Dioniso, Nona Inescu, Kyriaki Goni, Lucia Pizzani, Natália Trejbalová, Rachel Youn
Alessandro Biggio
Antonio Calderara, Alessandro Manfrin, Cosimo Pichierri, Marta Pierobon, Lisa Ponti, Alessandra Spranzi, Marco Strappato, Franco Vimercati
Bora Baboci, João Freitas, Enej Gala, Albano Hernandez, Mehdi-Georges Lahlou, Mirthe Klück, Leonardo Meoni, Giovanni Oberti, Oscar Abraham Pabón, Eugenia Vanni, Xiao Zhiyu, Francesco Carone
Bora Baboci, Adam Bilardi, Enej Gala, Cecilia Granara, Julien Monnerie, Jessy Razafimandimby, Ambra Viviani
Giulio Delvè, João Freitas, Mirthe Klück, Marco Andrea Magni, Giovanni Oberti, Oscar Abraham Pabón, Namasal Siedlecki, Jamie Sneider, Eugenia Vanni, Xiao Zhiyu
João Freitas, Mirthe Klück, Marco Andrea Magni, Oscar Abraham Pabón, Eugenia Vanni
Mirthe Klück, Marco Andrea Magni, Eugenia Vanni, Serena Vestrucci
Sara Enrico, Helena Hladilovà, Pietro Manzo, Giovanni Oberti
Home alone, the first solo exhibition by Davide Sgambaro (Padua, 1989) in the gallery, is a disarming and essential narrative — lucid in form and profound in content. Through four series of works, the artist gives shape to conflicting emotions that lie between affection and abuse, between childlike innocence and violence, inviting us to reflect on sad emotions often repressed. This is not the first time Sgambaro has tackled these themes: for years, his research has moved along the edges of pain and memory, translating them into a minimal and radical visual language. Home alone is also an experience to be lived and told: every presence, even the faintest, intertwines with the bodies, materials, and techniques used, evoking the ghost of a past trauma. A past that inhabits and empties the space, allowing a sense of horror vacui to emerge, where emptiness is not absence but memory.