Thomas Soardi - A Submerged Subversion | spazioSERRA
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Thomas Soardi

Curated by spazioSERRA
Critical text by Giulia Mengozzi

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On display from 09/03/2022 to 06/04/2022
Opening Wednesday 09/03/2022 at 19:00
Lancetti railway station, Milan

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Thomas Soardi (Thiene, Italy, 1991) is a multidisciplinary artist based in Milan. He holds a bachelor's degree in Fashion Design from N.A.B.A., Milan. His work has been exhibited at the Civic Museum Palazzo Santi (Cascia), Plasma Plastic Modern Art (Milan), Via Farini (Milan), Vitamina (Milan), Fabbrica del Vapore (Milan). In 2019 and 2020 he was one of the artists in residence at VIR (Milan) and Sciame Project (mobile art residency). Referring to space and the objects that mediate human relationships, Thomas Soardi's research revolves around two macro areas: the concept of space, concerning what defines it and regulates its use; ethology, as a comparative study on the animal kingdom (animal-human).

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Giulia Mengozzi (Bologna, Italy, 1987) lives in Turin, where she works as assistant curator at the PAV Parco Arte Vivente, a contemporary art center focused on ecological artistic practices. Since 2018 she has been part of ALMARE, a collective dedicated to contemporary practices that use sound as an expressive medium. In 2020 she helped found AWI - Art Workers Italia.

A Submerged Subversion

A Submerged Subversion is the site-specific exhibition by Thomas Soardi proposed within venerazioneMUTANTE, the exhibition season of spazioSERRA dedicated to the transformation of site-specific works during their permanence. The exhibition is visible from Wednesday 9 March 2022 to Wednesday 6 April 2022 at the Lancetti railway station.

 

Soardi's work draws an analogy between the Lancetti station, an urban space characterized by a continuous passage of flows, and the sea abyss, one of the last unexplored territories on planet Earth, despite covering almost 70% of its surface. Sculptures and audio tracks tell the evolution of some marine organisms, environmental hostility, the abyss-suburbs spatial dichotomy, and the anatomical exchange relationship between fish and human beings.

 

Giulia Mengozzi writes in the critical text accompanying the exhibition "The objects that populate A Submerged Subversion insist on the camouflage of the human animal, which in this case creates devices based on the anatomical structure of fish to be able to move around in their habitat”. The first installation consists of a steel cable, such as those that allow divers to monitor the depth level reached and ensure easy ascent. A stainless steel sculpture, attached to the cable, refers to the study of a diving fin immersed in a fluid. A synthetic glass sculpture represents an aquatic level from which a physiological solution flows and three other sculptures evoke marine organisms. Two other installations refer to bioluminescence and exafference (chemical reaction in response to an external stimulus) in marine creatures. The last installation is an iron sculpture representing the union between the tubular of the oxygen cylinder and a gill, on the top of which is placed a fusion of aluminum evoking the release of carbon dioxide into a fluid.

 

spazioSERRA becomes an upside-down aquatic environment, in which the blue ceiling takes the place of the seabed and the windows simulate the presence of water: as in an immersed environment, the shapes and colors of the works are visible in a blurred way. Two audio tracks of different lengths are played in a loop with a progressive delay, creating a constantly changing sound environment for the duration of the exhibition: sounds from the seabed intersect with sounds from the railway landscape. The other mutant element of the exhibition is a crystal, placed inside a Murano glass sculpture, contained in the fin, which is fed by a chemical solution that will cause its increase in size, in a constant way. but very slow, so much so that it seems invisible.

 

Crystallization is a condition in which what was initially mutable and fluid becomes instead static, solid. If life were considered movement, crystallization could seem to us an absence of movement, and therefore in apparent contrast to life.

In reality, crystallization never appears as a complete immobility, but as a slow movement, which only apparently arises as a force that opposes evolution. In the crystallization/evolution duality it is not possible to consider one without the other: without crystallization there would be no movement, and therefore evolution, and therefore life itself as we know it.

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