Aris
FLOATING SHAPES
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
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Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Cluster I, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Cluster II, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes, exhibition view, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes I, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes III, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy of SpazioC21
Aris, Floating Shapes II, Ph. Fabrizio Cicconi, Courtesy SpazioC21
Since 1993, ARISâ creative research has originated in lettering-that angular, abstract style
that characterizes the letters of his tag. Over time, this evolved into a softer, more rounded
mark, with which he began painting feminine silhouettes using brushes and rollers. Gradually,
these silhouettes opened up into the formlessness of primordial masses, fragmented by the
emergence of ambiguous organic creatures. These masses slowly began to unravel, while
the creatures started to take shape and definition, acquiring structure and soul through
layered superimpositions, spreading simultaneously across a wide variety of surfaces.
Since the beginning, ARISâ work has been a research into the mark that originated in inhospitable
and inaccessible places within the urban environment, from the decaying walls of abandoned
buildings immersed in nature to the anonymous surfaces of expanding cities. Yet this mark
continues its existence through fluctuation, enclosing forms on the two-dimensional surfaces
of paper and ceramics within the artistâs studio, where painting alternates screen printing and
drawing merges with modelling and cutting. A mark that has never surrendered to pure
abstraction, always maintaining a connection with the natural world that inspires the artist.
Today, the original investigation into the mark has matured into a research in which the mark
becomes form in space. Through continuous experimentation, metal allows these forms to
acquire volume within the third dimension of SPAZIOC21, where viewers can move from a
contemplative to an exploratory experience of ARISâ work. The entire corpus of original works
presented here, expresses the simplicity of the pure emotional approach with which the artist
addresses formal issues, without any programmatic elaboration of the mark, appearing to
arise directly from the artistâs stream of consciousness, imitating the natural non-linearity of
human thought. In line with this modus operandi, the exhibition unfolds through an intense
dialogue between the different types of works. The relationship between works on paper and
layered metal sculptures, as well as between ceramics and wall-mounted metal installations,
reveals the organic transformation of the mark into form and vice versa, enriching the
viewerâs perception with a certain sense of depth.
With this approach, ARIS demonstrates his ability to engage with sculptural language, creating
works endowed with an intense vitality that immediately establishes contact with viewers,
narrating absences speaking of presences, voids that evoke fullness. His sculptures allow the
gaze to pass through them, assembling the different surfaces of the layers, only guided by
instinct and curiosity, as the eye explores the multiplicity of overlaps, correspondences,
decompositions and suspended intersections. At times, layers seem to merge through
superimposition, while at others they intersect, then separate, generating plays of light,
shadowed spaces, and alternating full and empty sections. From works on paper and
ceramics, through window installations and interior wall pieces, to the sculptures in the
central space, the artistâs simple and immediate aesthetic dialectic unfolds through
relationships of contrast.
Fluid presences of light, air and matter are sustained by the contrast of visual sensations:
from the chromatic minimalism of blue and red outlining layered profiles against the white of
paper and inverted ceramic amphorae; to the white metal cut-outs against the blue
background layers of window installations; as well as the elegant chromatic contrast of
neutral-toned painterly interventions on the raw metal surfaces of the floating wall works.
Further contrasts emerge through unexpected perceptual paradoxes generated by the
selected materials. While a common material such as ceramic lends gravity to the lightness
of drawing and conveys a handcrafted perception of the mark on matter, a less common
material such as metal grants an unexpected and paradoxical lightness to forms, shifting the
viewerâs perception toward a dialogue between light and air through matter or its absence.
Here, ARIS achieves what sculptor Henry Moore described in his writings as a form âthat exists
in the fullness of its spatial reality,â through the reciprocal and respectful relationship between
the nature of the mark and the nature of metal.
In medium and large-scale works, these visual sensations possess the power to transform
the perception of surfaces and spaces, reconfiguring them and making the presence of air
visible, as the light within shadow, the absence of matter. In smaller formats, these same
sensations follow the rhythm of leaves dancing in the wind. These structures appear both
carefully composed and spontaneously fragile, formed by layered profiles whose ambiguity
allows simultaneous interpretations as leaf-like organisms and humanoid figures merging into
one another. Their sinuous shapes transform as viewers move around them, generating a
distinctive sense of seductionâone that, echoing Mooreâs words, derives from the
asymmetry characteristic of organic forms that grow by adapting to their environment and to
the force of gravity. On a conceptual level, this compelling compositional model-central to
the artistâs entire body of workâreflects an equally compelling worldview, according to which
all creatures, both sentient and non-sentient, interpenetrate and influence one another in a
continuous transformative process of cause and effect, as is life itself.
Alessandra IoalĂš
Alessandra IoalĂš