“Origini” is a work in progress. The installation includes houses in plexiglass of all sizes with blown glass globes on blue velvet bases. The conceptual piece states, in visual terms, that the Earth is home to all. The enigma of the installation is that the house encompasses the earth, and yet it is the earth that is our home.
Symbols from our past and Collective Memory are central to Jungian psychology and to our human experience as we relate to one another. In this public commission, the artist combines her sensitivity to climate change with her interest in a collective subconscious. Also at play is a nod to the History of Art and Hokusai’s Wave.
Onda di Memoria deals with the disruption of climate change, political tumult, and immigration on the civilizations that it affects. Using her classic language of glass symbols, the artist assembles them not in the grid reflecting a stable and categorized society, but in a wave in which all of our reliable points of reference are catapulted into chaos. The work is nonetheless hopeful: the symbols themselves serve as durable reminders of the persistence of intellect and culture.
Cast glass and string on wood panel, 3ft. X 5 ft. $5000
(NFS-similar pieces available on commission)
Cast glass symbols on wooden panel, 3 ft. X 4 ft. $4500 (NFS-similar pieces available on commission)
Slover Library Public Installation, 3ft x 5ft (92cm x 152cm) (NFS)
Cast glass, wax, gold leaf
Innocent Objects interrogates the power of objects, derived through the meaning that humans give to them throughout life. The sculptures allude to cultural contributions made by literature and architecture. The use of glass symbolizes through its hardness the permanence of artistic contributions, and through its transparency their intellectual and spiritual form.
Cast glass with gold leaf, $4000.
Plaster, beeswax, torched and cast glass, $2500.
Cast glass on a wooden panel, $3000
Cast glass books, $4000 each
Cast glass, $4000
Paper and ink
Collective Memory is a collection of work that combines architecture, literature, drawing, science, and sculpture. The columns represent a connection to other populations and people through major works of art. This is fundamental to the continuum of cultural patrimony. Not only is architecture beautiful, but the buildings are imbued with the spirits of those who lived, worked, and worshipped there. Literature is not just a story, but a connection to the commonality of our life on earth as human beings, no matter where and when we live and work. Art is the pillar of our humanity; without it, we collapse.
The aspect of artistic heritage that has a powerful magnetic pull for me personally is more ethereal. It is the collective unconscious, present in the abstract in the form of thought and energy, but made more concrete through the gifts left by the artists, architects, authors, and poets throughout history.
This collective unconscious, recorded in artistic achievements, creates a connection to other times and cultures and takes us out of our current time/space reality. My large installations are loosely based on the Greek temples of Sicily. Each column that I construct shows reverence to the great writers, thinkers, and artists that have lived before us and reminds us not only of our connection to them, but of our own potential in our version of the present.
The columns range from 6–12 feet in height. They are constructed with heavy printmakers’ paper. After the paper is cut, I copy passages from the words of the chosen artist, author, architect, or philosopher with an ink pen, sharpie, or sepia ink. This process is very liberal, with license given to the accidents of ink spills and smudges. At this point, I sometimes add symbols overlaying the writing. Here I use a variety of media including collage, watercolor, pencil, or ink. When the writing and drawing are complete, I brush encaustic over the entire surface of the piece. This process, historically used in painting, laminates and protects the paper and also adds a third intriguing dimension to the surface of the piece. I then wrap the paper around a core (from the Latin, cuore, heart) to erect a column. Finally, I tie the column with wire, string, or rope both to hold the piece and to add contrast and visual stimulus to it. They are at once contemporary and classical.
Memory Wall I and Memory Wall II take symbols from my own Italian Mediterranean ancestry. Cast in glass, the components are repeated, just as in our own memories and dreams, certain objects are repeated. While different symbols are significant for different people, they are always rooted in the place and time and values of our education. Hence, while individually meaningful, they are always also a part of our Collective Memory.
Paper, watercolor, pencil, wax, and string.
Paper, sepia ink, wax, watercolor, pencil, and string
Paper, wax, watercolor, pencil, and string.
Glass
Luisa Adelfio's sculpture in cast glass interrogates the power of objects, derived through the meaning that humans give to them throughout life. The work alludes to the magnitude of cultural contributions made by science, literature, and art. Glass is the perfect vehicle for the ideas expressed in Adelfio's work. Its hardness represents the permanence of cultural contributions, and its transparency the intellectual and spiritual nature of thoughts and ideas.