Lux Ore - Jill Kiddon
Anna Ruth, Panos Profitis, Luca Vanello
Weird Double
Project Info
- 💙 10N Gallery
- 💚 Jerome Nicod
- 🖤 Anna Ruth, Panos Profitis, Luca Vanello
- 💜 Jerome Nicod
- 💛 Jean Cristophe Lett
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Exploration of dualities
Text written by Jérôme Nicod
The concept of the "double" is prevalent across all cultures and mythologies, symbolizing dualism, inner conflict, and
interconnectedness. In mythology, twins, often signify two halves of a whole, embodying contrasting qualities like male/female,
good/evil, or sun/moon. Featuring the visionary works of Anna Ruth, Luca Vanello, Panos Profitis, this exhibition explores the
concept of the "double”, it delves into the intersections of nature, mythology, and technology, offering a multi-faceted lens through
which we can contemplate the complexities of human existence.
Anna Ruth's work is atmospheric and imbedded in romantic medieval references, parts of character’s head or eyes are often
depicted crying or in action of intense lamentation creating a psychological tension and linking us to our own introspection. Setting
here a particular focus on the relationship dynamics between characters in her scenes and their mirrored reflections in water,
those Narcis figures prompt viewers to ponder the complexities inherent of the psychological construction of the self. Quoting the
dual ambiguity of our personalities those character seemed frozen action of self-meditation. Navigating further the intricate web of
interpersonal relationships depicted, the presence of a mythical characters like Harpies in Ruth's body of work adds depth to the
theme of duality.
Using architectural elements to structure the composition, Ruth’s blurs further the limit of her the paintings and our physical space,
often reproducing those elements in the space and some artefacts. Here the heterotopy is emphasized by some mirrored doubles
placed in specific corners of the gallery space to further enhances the uncanniness resulting from the duplication of subject inside
the painting’s field.
Luca Vanello's sculptures and installations envisions a symbiosis between organic elements and synthetic materials revealing the
impressive beauty of vegetal structures but also critically showing the danger and limits of a possible dystopian future. As the
boundaries between ecosystems and organisms are now being challenged more than ever, his innovative sculptural pieces crafted
from salvaged branches and leaves of plants offer a unique possible future state where this limit would have been exceeded. What
if the intersection of nature and technology could create a different kind of life?
Through a meticulous process Vanello’s is able to extract and replace the plant’s fluids with resins, this process results into the
extraction of chlorophyll and to create a preserved faded artefact, almost mummified residue of the vegetal body resembling bird
feathers of an alien biosphere. The display and hanging of these skeletons in space emphasizes the transformative process resulting
in a peculiar duality that blurs the lines between the natural and the artificial. His sculptures invite the viewer to reconsider the
boundaries of the uncanny double that has been created and could now potentially create new forms of harmony and coexistence
between the organic world and the man-made environment. In doing so, they provoke conversations about the evolving
relationship between the ecological spheres of the Anthropocene.
Panos Profitis, a Greek artist, brings a historical and mythological dimension to the concept of duality. Drawing inspiration from
both Hellenistic Greece and the rationalist period of the late 1920s, his cast aluminum sculptures inhabit a potential fictional
theatrical stage created for the viewer. Profitis infuses his works with architectural precision and geometric forms activating the
space as a scenography or a field of a potential scenery. By combining these versatile materials with manufactured modern
artefacts and structures such as ladders or prefabricated pipes or found objects he fuses the timeless historical references, satirical
faces, tongues eyes and bodies. Ultimately, he creates a dialogue between past and present, tradition and innovation.
Through this fusion of styles and narratives, Profitis encourages viewers to reflect on the enduring influence of the past on
nowadays socio-political struggles and propaganda. Profitis's art stands as a testament to the enduring power of mythic narratives
and socio-political lineage while heralding a new chapter in the exploration of form, symbolism, and cultural heritage in the realm
of contemporary sculpture.
It is in this collision of diverse perspectives and creative voices that the true essence of the exhibition emerges, inviting viewers to
engage in a dialogue that transcends individual works and converges into a shared
Jerome Nicod