ARCHEOLOGIE

Archeologie: note sulla collezione | Archeologie: notes on the collection

The Archeologie ceramics collection

Inspired by the idea that “a wall is like a book to be opened”, in the Archeologie

collection Franco Guerzoni uses large ceramic surfaces as a medium for his pictorial

language, made up of visual signs intended to stimulate “a journey into the interior,

revealing the experiences, memories, signs and symbols the wall has absorbed over

the centuries”. Disused locations, domestic architecture and industrial spaces, and

archaic and ruined dwellings re-emerge from the painted surface with the dignity of

intense, image-inspiring apparitions.

Running through eras and histories that lead back to ancient times, all the way

to the archetypal cave, the most symbolic of all locations, the archaeology of the

everyday is brought back to life through filmy coatings and painting-over effects

that create new memories on the surface of the ceramic slabs. What Guerzoni’s new

collection offers us is reverse archaeology, defined not in a retrospective, backward-

looking narrative but rather in an ideal sketch of the future, rendered through a

mixture of signs that contains and overlaps different historic ages.

The collection is expressed in a series of flat ceramic slabs with complex

backgrounds, with dense pigmentations and accumulations, powdered colours

and chalky materials, resembling the “stripping” method of fresco creation. In

Archeologie, numerous images are overlapped like slides projected one on top of the

other, generating an accelerated journey through time, in which the rubbing-away or

crumbling of parts of the image are commonplace. In the tactile density thus created,

the viewer can read an infinite number of stories, combined and stratified on a single

substrate. Thanks to modern production technologies, these stories transform the

walls covered with the ceramic slabs into works of art, reactivating the constructive

dialogue between creative imagination and production expertise that has made the

history of the CEDIT brand a shining example of the partnership between designers of

genius and sophisticated technological processes, giving outcomes with outstanding

aesthetic and formal impact.

The work of art can be placed at the service of decoration, allowing the

construction of genuine, large-sized pictorial design schemes: the ceramic-covered

walls are clad with the artist’s poetics, a coloured garment that will survive over time

to become a memory.

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