The Farsettiarte Gallery hosts a solo exhibition by Vittorio Corsini.
The artist from Livorno continues his exploration of open space and the dynamics of living, investigating the relationship between matter, light, and architecture, in a body of works that includes sculptures and wall installations.
At the heart of Corsini's research is the theme of landscape and inhabited space, expressed through heterogeneous materials and languages. The wall pieces, characterized by the use of light, oscillate between figuration and abstraction: from recognizable images, such as a forest or a bookshelf, to monochromatic surfaces crossed by luminous bands. The dialogue between solids and voids, between vertical lines that unite and separate, recalls the lessons of artists like the cuts of Lucio Fontana, the neon of Mario Merz, and the monochromes of Yves Klein, reference points for the artist originally from Cecina, born in 1956.
In the sculptures, Corsini returns to one of his cornerstone themes: the dwelling. His glass houses, containing colored pigments, rest on irregularly shaped marble bases, evoking a sense of precariousness and simultaneously of protection, between instability and welcome. This duality becomes a metaphor for human existence, suspended between the desire for security and the aspiration for an opening to the world.
Corsini has always confronted different materials and forms, rejecting a univocal aesthetic in favor of an open and dynamic exploration.