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Home Exhibitions

Francesco Ardini: Lo Sguardo di Mercurio at Limbo Contemporary, Milan

October 8, 2025
in Exhibitions

Francesco Ardini: Lo Sguardo di Mercurio is on view at Limbo Contemporary, Milan

September 25 – November 1, 2025

The fragility of matter, impermanent and vulnerable in the face of the passage of time. Transformative practices fix mineral memories through fire. Metamorphic processes, alchemical transmutations, reveal esoteric epiphanies. In this way, Francesco Ardini’s research outlines a new concept of nature that is mediated by technology, relational and expanded, no longer conflictual but interactive.

The exhibition begins with the work Mercurio (2025). Through a reciprocal exchange of gazes, a relationship is established between the work and the viewer, who, upon crossing the threshold, is struck by the irradiated and ethereal vision of the small-scale sculpture. The forms are skillfully modeled to render a figure with anthropomorphic features, an archetypal presence that metaphorically supports its own gaze. A series of ocular lenses give rise to a play of reflections, a silent dance marked by the alternation between the visual agent and the object of the projection. The work suggests a holistic conception of vision, in which matter, light, and color exist in an interdependent condition.

The exhibition spaces host a series of two-dimensional works, real landscapes born from the digital reworking of photographic material captured by the artist in places of age-old tradition such as Nove, a town in the Veneto region renowned for ceramic production, and the Brenta River. Clouds of data, composed of photographs of ceramic artifacts and natural glimpses of the river, are fed to artificial intelligence algorithms. The results undergo a further elaboration process through precise inputs from Ardini, establishing an osmotic flow of thought and sensitivity between human and machine. Thus, the Vedute are born, an homage to the classical iconographic theme, reinterpreted in a contemporary key and presented as photo-ceramic prints. Each of these works is accompanied by one or more amorphous elements, refractory extrusions that surface from the flat plane, emerging like breaths to inhabit three dimensional space. The Diatomee, fluid bodies evoking a suspended dimension—are constitutionally hybrid images, taking form like the dream of a machine becoming matter.

According to an antithetical demiurgic movement, the exhibition concludes with a descent, both physical and evocative, into a proto-vital condition. Fluid, visceral presences recall amniotic liquids in motion: viscous volumes surfacing and emerging from the earth itself. Ceramic castings and acetate forms share a metamorphic dimension, alluding to primordial organisms engaged in an evolutionary trajectory that reaches toward the forms presented on the upper floor of the gallery.

Ardini’s artistic practice contributes to a broader and innovative understanding of ceramics within the contemporary art context, without rejecting the traditional and artisanal dimension of his work. A formal, plastic, and tactile reflection in which classical canon and a generative impulse that surpasses traditional codes coexist inseparably. A mediation, a shared gesture between nature and artifice, a creative process in which matter undertakes a cyclical movement between physicality and transcendence. It traces a line of continuity with a primordial tension, an imaginative force where memory and speculation find a point of resolution.

With special thanks to: Ceramica Gatti 1928, Faenza; Zanolli Ceramiche, Nove; Mazzucchelli 1849, Castiglione Olona.

Text by Edoardo Durante

Francesco Ardini (b. 1986, Padova) is an artist from Nove who has spent nearly twenty years exploring the sculptural possibilities of ceramics. His work develops an aesthetic of fragile and transitory beauty, suspended between memory, time and artisanal tradition. He has exhibited at Museo Carlo Zauli (Faenza), MIC (Faenza), Valentina Bonomo (Rome), Federica Schiavo Gallery (Rome), and in international contexts such as the Jingdezhen Ceramics Biennale (China), Gimhae Ceramics museum (Korea), Yingge Ceramic Museum (Taiwan) and the Guldagergaard International Ceramic Research Center (Denmark).

Contact
info@limbo-contemporary.com

Limbo Contemporary
Via Rosolino Pilo, 14
20129, Milano
Italy

Photos courtesy of the artist and Limbo Contemporary

Tags: Francesco ArdiniLimbo ContemporaryMilan

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