My artistic production gets inspiration from nature, particularly from nature sublimely described in the book Kunstformen der Natur (Art Forms of Nature) of the German philosopher and biologist Ernst Haeckel. This work, carried out at the end of 1800, contains over 100 prints followed by an accurate description of animals and marine creatures: Haeckel's study mainly focused on the observation of marine microorganisms and of the spread of the theory of evolution. Above all I was impressed from the radiolarians' siliceous skeletons, a component of the marine plankton, a substance present in all oceans. Plankton, a Greek term meaning wandering, presents a peculiarity: it moves only vertically, the remaining of its movement is determined by the wave motion. I found this image strongly evocative of manÔ³ life, who is partially the author of his own decisions and who is partially in the hands of uncontrollable and uninfluencable forces.
Radiolarians inspired my first work and laid the basis of my following artistic production. Starting from primary forms, I submit them to the action of external forces which destroy them on the one hand and on the other hand give them a new shape, that is a new life. The surface of my works is corroded. You can guess their initial geometry, but then time devours and deforms them. The result is a fragile object, like man's life, but also a continuous becoming.
My artistic activity is tightly linked with technology. New frontiers were opened in the field of sculpture thanks to the new digital technologies. Nowadays sculpture can be conceived in a totally virtual environment to be built by machines using the layer by layer principle, like it happened to my works.