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HANAMI Honda
The Hanami project stems from the synergistic encounter between the plastic vision of sculptor Filippo Tincolini and the photographic lens of Laura Veschi. At the heart of this research lies a profound reflection on the metamorphosis of matter, and on the contrast between industrial archetypes and the organic delicacy of rebirth—evoked by the Japanese term celebrating the cherry blossom season.
Through a rigorous black-and-white photographic sequence, the visual documentation traces the very genesis of the artwork step by step: from the geometric, skeletal precision of the initial wire mesh structures, through the dense texture of raw clay on the workbench, up to the finalized shape that enters into a direct dialogue with the viewer.
The deconstruction of the mechanical vehicle—the Honda SH125 scooter—strips away its utilitarian function to become a pure formal pretext. It transforms into a conceptual shell where the hardness of metal and the plasticity of earth merge, exploring the thin boundary between human artifice and the aesthetics of transience.
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HANAMI Honda
The Hanami project stems from the synergistic encounter between the plastic vision of sculptor Filippo Tincolini and the photographic lens of Laura Veschi. At the heart of this research lies a profound reflection on the metamorphosis of matter, and on the contrast between industrial archetypes and the organic delicacy of rebirth—evoked by the Japanese term celebrating the cherry blossom season.
Through a rigorous black-and-white photographic sequence, the visual documentation traces the very genesis of the artwork step by step: from the geometric, skeletal precision of the initial wire mesh structures, through the dense texture of raw clay on the workbench, up to the finalized shape that enters into a direct dialogue with the viewer.
The deconstruction of the mechanical vehicle—the Honda SH125 scooter—strips away its utilitarian function to become a pure formal pretext. It transforms into a conceptual shell where the hardness of metal and the plasticity of earth merge, exploring the thin boundary between human artifice and the aesthetics of transience.