Bridge Art Project - Artists
The Bridge Art Project is a one-time collective exhibition by artists who come together to commemorate Wolfgang von Goethe's birthday. This page was setup for curatorial purposes only.
- Paola Cilli, visual artist, Italy.
- Giovanni de Luca, visual artist, Italy.
- Luca Piccini, visual artist, Italy.
- Marcello Toma, visual artist, Italy.
- Miokovic Dejan, visual artist, Serbia.
- Loukia Spanaki, soprano singer, Greece.
- Moises Llerena, visual artist, Switzerland.
- Mia de Schur, visual artist, Germany.
- Uwe Mueller-Fabian, visual artist, Germany.
- Johannes Zoller, visual artist, Germany.
The artists in the Bridge Art Project converge in a non-profit itinerant art collection that speaks for the worth of struggling to accomplish the individual artistic conception.
This exhibition commemorates the 263rd. anniversary of the birth of German writer, politician and artist Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, born August 28, 1749 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Central to this collection is the perception of how culture builds and harmonizes its diversity "under the metaphoric power of the gearing, as a paradigm for the entirety of relationships at the base of the human experience." (Marcello Toma, Rome).
The gearing and building blocks are also represented in this collection, symbolically connecting the viewer to the understanding that diverse people are parts of the social mechanism that fits the cultures and reaches coherence, harmonized through the artistic effort of creative minds who produce the art, always different but equally unique objects of intellectual contemplation.
Our art collection is conceived to develop positive intercultural perspectives, departing from observations around Goethe's working method:
1 Goethe imagined each part of the artwork first, to then produce the work. Art as the purpose of the mind that can bring about wonders, when creativity is oriented to the purpose of cultural elevation.
2 The arts are not accidental products of the human mind. The works come as a deliberate integration of taste, reason, work and thinking; developing from the conception (inspiration) of an idea, up to its final representation.
3 It is important to seek —as Goethe did— the aesthetic dream that nourishes the heart and strives for completion, to then organize the creative activity in a way that harmony and beauty may step into the reality of the individual and the surroundings, giving birth to a product of completion that may benefit one and many members of a society and culture.
4 The human being completes the world by giving life to forms inspired through the wonders of imagination. These wonders, the muses that led Goethe's creativity to prosper and flourish for the benefit of the world, are alive and freely sharing inspiration with all peoples now and here.
Through such shared effort, artists can improve values of education, culture and society through individual discoveries shown in collective presentations intended to inspire creativity in the viewers.
Artists inspire viewers to create their invidisual conception of "beauty", through the cultivation of traditionally and unsophisticated means of artistic production: paper and pencil, the human voice, brushes and pigments, clay and human hands, the human body.
Imagination is the initial venue to make many art works become possible.
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This collection has been setup to show together in one event to be announced.
This web page is copyrighted at the Belgian Society of Authors, Composers and Publishers: SABAM.