Palazzo Magnani hosts an immersive journey to the origins of a revolution in the way we see, capable of radically redefining the concepts of space and time within the visual culture of the early twentieth century.
At the heart of this lies the visionary thought of Pavel Florensky - a key figure whose ideas remain strikingly relevant today - serving as an interpretive lens through which to re-examine some of the century’s most daring artistic experiments.
The exhibition creates a novel dialogue between the spiritual depth of the Russian icon tradition and the explorations of the historical avant-gardes, linking works by Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Kazimir Malevich and artists of the Suprematist school. The result is a "three-voice" narrative - abstract, lyrical and intellectual - capable of transcending the boundaries of the visible; here, art becomes a means of accessing other extents - such as the fourth dimension - that are invisible yet profoundly perceptible.