From 8 May to 19 June 2022
In Rome , L'Attesa opens to the public, the third and final act of Three Scenarios on the Perception of Time , an exhibition of the Chromatic Number lasting one calendar year. The project is intended as a journey in stages in which, from time to time, the works present and the space change radically.
In this third act, the artistic devices, together with the environment, call the public to question themselves about the future, or rather, each one about their own future. All the elements present, the materials and the contents of the works are designed to activate an introspective and multisensory aesthetic experience in the public. In this scenario, for the creation of the works on display, the collective made use of its own and unprecedented artificial intelligence: SONH, acronym for Statements Of a New Humanity. The place chosen for the exhibition is the project space of Numero Cromatico, a very peculiar place adjacent to the Monumental Cemetery of Verano in Rome, in the historic area of the marble craftsmen. The space does not act as a mere container but itself becomes an enrichment tool for the aesthetic experience of the user.
The exhibition is the bearer of some of the principles on which the collective has been working in recent years: interdisciplinarity, interaction, the artist's expressive abstinence, minimality, sensoriality, embodiment and the study of emotions. Finally, the exhibition reflects on the relationship between human beings and the environment, between nature and artifice. During the entire period of the exhibition, a neuroaesthetics experiment will be carried out, in which it is possible to participate by booking through the web channels of Numero Cromatico.
Via Tiburtina, 213, Rome, Italy
Opening hours
opens - closes | last entry | |
monday | Closed now | |
tuesday | Closed now | |
wednesday | Closed now | |
thursday | Closed now | |
friday | Closed now | |
saturday | Closed now | |
sunday | Closed now |
From 28 February to 25 May 2025
Radical Software: Women, Art & Computing 1960–1991
Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna