Metamorphosis
Additional information coming soon.
Painter | Sculptor | Glassmaker
Additional information coming soon.
Additional information coming soon.
Why don’t we like changes? We don’t just resist making them, we resist being changed.
The constant shift to adapt to different times and new circumstances is a vital process not just in our development as individuals, but also in the complex nature of human relationships. Yet most of the times it is fiercely opposed.
And what is supposed to be a nurturing environment becomes a stifling one.
YOU & ME is a double sided piece.
Hanging from the ceiling at eye level, it is an invitation to peep through the keyhole on either facet or to look at each other through this piece.
It represents the dichotomy intrinsic to every relation: you-me, love-hate, expectation-reality, past-future.
The nature of change is unattractive and beautiful at the same time. We fear what we don’t know, yet we long for better and brighter things.
There is a sort of dread – the anticipation of negative outcomes – caught in the barbed wire, but also a hint of optimism in those golden caterpillars.
Psyche is the Greek word for both a butterfly and the soul.
A gestation period carries the promise of a new beginning. It’s a period of maturation and development before reaching a new stage – from caterpillar to butterfly – when we can break free and fly with the change.
Hitherto there are two sides to every story and the truth usually lies somewhere in between.
As we curiously peer through the keyhole, we find out the deceit.
There is no flapping of colourful wings. No transformation has taken place.
Just the broken promise of hundreds of dusty caterpillars whose metamorphosis never happened.
Created just after reading ‘The Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi’ – edited by a very young Charles Dickens – this work pays homage to the most famous clown of the British stage.
This work is influenced by the seven demons of air from the Babylonian tradition.
They belong to the Bad Boys series which includes, amongst others, BLACK CLOUD, PORTHOLE, PLANE, KILL SANTA CLAUS and MY LITTLE PONY.
THE GLUTTONS is an unsettling time-capsule of our current art discourse.
Visually owing a creative debt to the medieval painter Hieronymus Bosch, Roberto Cambi re-interprets the archetype of the vicious circle – the ouroboros or snake biting its own tail – to reflect on the impasse plaguing the art world.
Art as an urban elitist activity is not reaching out to people beyond its usual circles.
Art is devouring itself.
On the one hand the artistic community has become desperately self-obsessed.
The creative process has turned into merely a PR exercise with artists, curators and galleries devoting much of their own time and resources to promote themselves to their peers.
Increasingly it is a world which eats its offspring too. Vibrant newcomers are swallowed by powerful galleries and spat out as money-makers and celebrities. Their voice is no longer heard.
On the other hand the public is no better.
Blockbuster exhibitions attract hordes of visitors who are more interested in being part of the circuit of culture than engaging with the art on show. The fear of being left out.
At times they cannot even see the exhibits because of the sheer number of people in confined spaces.
They blindly gobble up as much as they can and move onto the next big event.
THE GLUTTONS, whichever group they come to represent in our mind, are like locusts. They leave a barren landscape behind.
Additional information coming soon.
A unique piece. Saint Sebastian is part of a series which includes OSSOBUCO and OSSOBUCO WITH ARROWS.
A unique piece. Between a rock and a hard place. At times not even meditation can keep worries at bay. Part of a series which includes, amongst others, YOGI FROG and GOLDEN BINDU YOGI FROG.
A look at CLOCHARD is a glimpse into Roberto Cambi’s stream of consciousness as he walks through the city.
The resourceful recycling strategies of homeless people and the choices of an increasingly environmentally conscious society are born out of different needs, yet they strike the artist as carrying very similar aesthetics.
Whilst the second are promoted in every possible way, the first are less evident as they are aggressively kept out of sight by defensive architecture.
It speaks volume about the collective attitude to poverty, which is forcibly kept out of sight and out of mind.
Even when dealing with one of the lowest human common denominator – trash – people find a way to discriminate against the most vulnerable.
Resources are often scarce for those sleeping rough, yet creativity abounds. The narrative of survival is often chronicled through the acquisition, transformation and disintegration of plastic bottles, rags, supermarket trolleys, suitcases and carrier bags, newspapers and cartons. These are not only re-used within an inch of their lives, but are cleverly pulled apart and re-assembled to serve different purposes.
They also happen to define a person in more ways than one. They are the few prized possessions of someone who has lost everything and sometimes become the focus of attention of passersby doggedly refusing to acknowledge a human being standing besides them.
Roberto Cambi takes inspiration from the new lease of life given to these objects to create similarly assembled pieces.
Familiar shapes are taken apart, combined and put back together through the medium of ceramic.
They look rugged, but are inherently fragile. Much like the life of those living on the streets.
Inventiveness and resilience are really two faces of the same coin.
There is no denying that circumstances are incredibly difficult for the homeless – a daily struggle with hardship, physical and mental problems as well as addiction – yet people hang on to their hopes for the future. A resolve to pull through. A yearning for better things to come.
The gold trims in this new series of works are there to catch the eye, they are glimmers of beauty and optimism in places where you would not necessarily expect to find them.