Since its opening in 2020, the Artizon Museum has created an original exhibition every year under the title of Jam Session. The idea is to compare some masterpieces from the Ishibashi Foundation Collection with new works created by a contemporary artist. For this edition of the Jam Session the Tokyo museum invited Yuko Mohri, an artist who works mainly in the field of installations. In her creations, Mohri reinvents the use of objects collected in cities around the world, creating true autonomous "ecosystems", made up of apparently disparate mechanical elements. In these organic and tranquil worlds, Mohri gives shape to invisible forces present in space - magnetism, electricity, air, dust, water and temperature - opening new unexpected paths to the perception of reality by her spectators.
Last night, Bvlgari celebrated the launch of Masterpieces from the Torlonia Collection, a new exhibit at the Louvre. As a supporter of the Torlonia collection since 2017, Bvlgari hosted the opening event, welcoming some 100 guests to the Louvre for cocktails, a private tour of the show and musical performances. The largest private collection of ...