Time splits in two: on one side, junk time - accelerations, loops, and fatigue produced by technology and capitalism, on the other, deep, Neolithic and underwater times that flow beyond our spectrum. In this fracture takes shape Hito Steyerl’s The Island, a visual narrative that uses science fiction and the logics of quantum physics to reorder space and storytelling. The project interweaves four trajectories - Lucciole, The Artificial Island, The Birth of Science Fiction, Flash! - ranging from microorganisms to galaxies, from poetry to pop culture, and even low-resolution content generated by AI. At its core, a new film expands into an installation: sculptures, structures, and video interviews form an archipelago of dimensional passages where data and fiction contaminate one another. The theoretical trigger is an anecdote by Darko Suvin: in emergencies, imagining “other worlds” becomes a survival technique. Steyerl translates this into experience: flooding as a recurring motif, AI-fueled authoritarian drift, political pressure on science, and the climate crisis. The result is a device of estrangement that doesn’t ask us to believe in science fiction, but to use it as a critical tool to see multiple realities at once.
Until May 20th, the Bvlgari boutique on Via Montenapoleone is hosting "SHARED VISION OF BEAUTY – Bvlgari Through the Lens of Gian Paolo Barbieri." This exhibition honors the captivating relationship between Barbieri's photography and Bvlgari's heritage, showcased through select pieces from the brand's archives. Gian Paolo Barbieri, an iconic ...