A door ajar, the rustle of paper, the milky glow of a glass plate: the exhibition opens where the museum usually falls silent. With Hidden Collections, Giorgio Di Noto enters the institution’s backstage and treats it as a landscape to be explored: photographic archives, storage rooms, and conservation labs become darkrooms of memory - places where the past is not displayed but prepared for viewing. Here, prints, negatives, and plates surface like stratified finds - images, scratches, erasures, fingerprints - an interweaving in which time is part of the work. The fulcrum is the Photographic Archive, investigated like an archaeological site from which to extract and re-mediate iconographies. Di Noto shifts attention to the tools that have shaped our gaze - the photographic mask - that black border that isolates the object - turns from a “neutral” technique into a critical gesture. It highlights and removes, reveals and conceals, tracing the shifting boundary between document and invention. The result is a series of images that reflect on institutions’ selective power - on what enters the narrative and what remains at the margins. Entrusting an artist with reading the museum’s hidden holdings means acknowledging that neither archaeology nor photography is ever innocent - both choose, edit, and construct meaning. In this fertile ambiguity, Hidden Collections turns the invisible into living matter, inviting us to rethink memory not as a closed archive but as an open, continuously rewritable process.
Festival des Cabanes 2025: ephemeral architecture in the gardens of Villa Medici
Five temporary installations transform the gardens of Villa Medici into a creative laboratory where art, nature, and sustainable visions converge. Also on view is the celebrated Panorama of Rome by Louis Le Masson.
Fondazione Bvlgari and the Etruscan National Museum of Villa Giulia announce a new partnership. The initiative begins with three main missions: the lighting of ...