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The Garden as Interior
The installation is situated in a private garden in Venice, operating as a space of containment rather than exposure. In this context, the physical landscape and psychological interior are in continuous relation, shaped through one another.
Rooted in the intersection of emotion and literature, the installation builds on a previous body of work based on Baudelaire’s « Les Bienfaits de la Lune », which depicted the moon as a maternal force marking a transition into motherhood, while this current project shifts toward the entanglement of child and mother within lived perception.
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The Central Axis: Effi Briest
Positioned at the center of the garden are swings, their scale and form relating to childhood objects. Cast in bronze, they introduce a material weight and permanence that contrasts with their usual associations of fleeting movement. This focal point references « Effi Briest » (Theodor Fontane, 1895), in particular the opening scene in which the protagonist appears as a young girl on a swing. In this image, the swing introduces a condition of suspension: Effi is in motion but not in control, positioned between the freedom of childhood and the social structures that will soon determine her life.
The swing further serves as a fundamental discourse on the duality of freedom and risk. This represents a difficult and constant balance linked to motherhood. It captures the fine line between the exhilaration of watching a child fly and the inherent danger of the fall. This precarious balance mirrors the child’s burgeoning autonomy and an internal negotiation, where every movement toward independence carries the weight of potential consequence.
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The Landscape of Objects
By Irene CattaneoThe installation is further articulated through a series of sculptural elements populating this “interior” landscape:
Snowdrops
Light sculptures in glass and bronze serving as a deeply personal ode to my mother. Snowdrops (Galanthus) are the first heralds of spring, symbolizing new beginnings and hope as they push through frozen ground.
Their elegant simplicity and resilience — blooming while winter still lingers — represent a quiet promise of renewal passed down through generations. -
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Fire-flies
Cast in bronze and sommerso red imbued glass. The name plays on “fireflies” and “time flies,” collapsing light and time into a linguistic slip common to childhood perception and cinematic imagination — where objects, words, and time are easily animated, misheard, and misread, taking on agency through perception. A play between name, function, and placement in relation to fire.
The Fire-flies and the well are conceived as opposing and complementary forces: the well as depth, growth through darkness and inward reflection; the Fire-flies as lightness, play, and unstable perception.
Pareidola
Two tables conceived as an ode to one of my favorite childhood games: cloud-watching and interpretation. By highlighting the anagram of “cloud” as “could,” these pieces stand for the infinite feeling of possibility inherent to childhood.
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Queen of the Night
A sculptural bench, table, and key set representing an evolution of previous Paris showpieces. Referencing flowers that bloom for only a single night, these works allude to the fleeting and incapturable nature of beauty.
Utilizing lunar opaline glass, the set maintains a dialogue with the previous “lunar” body of work, illustrating a continuous evolution where one phase informs the next. The inclusion of the key introduces a symbolic dimension of secrecy and hidden spaces, operating as a connection point between « The Secret Garden » and the Biennale’s thematic framework, evoking the tension between concealment and revelation.
The table setting pieces sourced by my mother and sister introduce an intimate domestic layer within the installation, extending the work into a lived, familial memory.
— Irene Cattaneo
Il Gardino Segreto (The Secret Garden)
Current viewing_room






