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MAGIC BUS PROJECT ROOM 19 September – 12 October 2024 Opening: Thursday, September 19 from 18.00 Daphne Christoforou and Lusesita – Myths and Fables curated by Ivan Quaroni

For the opening of Magic Bus, the new project room inside the space on Via Solferino which will present special initiatives focusing on new artists, Galleria Antonio Colombo Arte Contemporanea is pleased to present Myths and Fables, a double solo show by the artists Lusesita and Daphne Christoforou. The name Magic Bus – which takes its cue from a song by The Who, while at the same time linking back to the period of journeys to India made by the “flower children” in the 1960s and 1970s – picks up the threads of Little Circus, the previous project space set aside for new proposals. Magic Bus will host programming open to ideas, stimuli and investigations, ranging through the visual arts, design and music, in line with the pioneering spirit of experimentation that has always driven the approach of the gallery. Lusesita (born in La Rioja, Spain in 1979) and Daphne Christoforou (born in 1987, a native of Nicosia, Cyprus), are artists who use ceramics to make works inspired by fables and classical mythology. Both use the fantasy imagery of the tradition, adapting it to the expressive needs of the modern world. In their creations, differing in technique and style, epos and folklore become filters or magnifiers to interpret the present and the relationship between personal experience and a universal dimension. The Spanish artist uses pastel colors and opalescent hues to create soft forms that contain veiled latent tensions and emotional shadings. Her figures, mostly mermaids, unicorns, swans or chimeras, are allegories that bridge the gap between childhood imagination and the unconscious dimension in adults. While works like Candy Mermaid and Little Unicorn clearly draw on age-old myths and legends, pieces like Crazy Summer Vacations, Evil Spell Repellent and Dreaming with the Swan Trip demonstrate the artist’s inventive and combinatory talents. Lusesita brings together artisanal and conceptual approaches, giving rise to an original and imaginative language, which blends individual memories and impressions with collective symbols and archetypes. Daphne Christoforou, on the other hand, develops a plastic grammar that reinterprets the ancient Greek tradition of pottery in an ironic and disorienting way. For the artist, the classic epos is not inert matter, but a continuing source of inspiration that permits her to reinterpret new contemporary myths. Her pots are allegories of an Olympus in crisis, where the divinities come to terms with a present full of contradictions and doubts. In Ideal Pump, for example, the artist shows the gods as they adapt to the new aesthetic canons imposed by the culture of fitness. Zeus, Apollo, Hermes, Aphrodite and Artemis, divinities that once represented the ideal of beauty and harmony, succumb to current aesthetic obsessions, increasingly governed by changing and passing fashions. In the works titled Narcissus and Hephaestus, the artist underlines the themes of vanity and the rejection of traditional aesthetics. While the former alludes to the narcissism that rules over a large part of today’s society, the latter – in which Hephaestus refuses to carry out the requests of the client, opting to conduct his own research – can be interpreted as a merciless critique of the individualism of contemporary art, with its underestimation of the value of technique. In short, Christoforou uses classic imagery as a tool of cultural analysis, addressing contemporary complexity with intelligence and irony.

Though moving on parallel planes, the sculptural researches of Lusesita and Daphne Christoforou prove in many ways to be complementary. Both shape clay to narrate universal stories, in which past and present meet on the plane of fantastic and irreverent imagination. Lusesita, with her poetic surrealism, explores the tension between innocence and disquiet in fables, while Daphne Christoforou, through an epic filter, reveals the whims and manias of the society of consumption.
Both demonstrate that the perpetuation of fables and myths in today’s society relies on their ability to remain, in any era, the best tools for a critical interpretation of reality.

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