Groupshow
Not too far, Not too close
Project Info
- 💙 Andrea Festa Fine Art
- 💚 Zhimin Zhang
- 🖤 Groupshow
- 💜 Zhimin Zhang
- 💛 Eleonora Cerri Pecorella
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"Not too far, Not too close" draws on the widely known Goldilocks principle: the proposition
that optimal outcomes arise from a state of precise balance. In astrobiology, planets
positioned at an exact orbital distance from their star can sustain liquid water, making life
possible. In economics, an economy warm enough to sustain steady growth yet cool
enough to avoid inflation achieves a balance between growth, employment, and price
stability. In developmental psychology, the most effective learning occurs when the
complexity of material is calibrated to be neither overly simplistic nor prohibitively
challenging.
Standing before a painting is much the same: the most meaningful engagement occurs at
just the right physical and psychological distance - close enough to perceive nuance, yet
far enough to preserve the work’s autonomy.
Mary DeVincentis’s paintings hover between myth and memory, imagination and lived
experience. Never too far as to feel remote, never too close as to dissolve into certainty.
Whether a figure lies upon an endless green meadow, seems on the verge of being swept
away by a surging stream, or kneels before a fractured sun with a body scattered in green
leaves, they dwell in a threshold space. As intermediaries, they embody the fragile
balance of proximity and distance, binding together past and future, experience and
imagination.
Lisa Ivory’s travellers move through a liminal, mythical terrain, a ruined Eden that hovers
between ruin and renewal. They exist in shifting proximity with nature, near enough to spark
a fire yet distant enough to drift past. Figures of death and life co-exist, one watching the
other from afar, present and absent at once. Within and beyond the canvas, binaries
collapse in this space of distance, revealing a fragile balance between intimacy and
detachment, belonging and estrangement.
Ralf Kokke paints from memory, dream, and fleeting visual impulse. His figures, at once
contemporary and fantastical, are steeped in classical compositional echoes, carrying
with them a sense of timelessness. The textured surfaces often resemble ancient cave
murals, weighted by their visual density and also by their historical resonance. In Kokke’s
work, divergent intentions collapse into a shared destination: the threshold where personal
reverie meets collective memory. His paintings stage a dialogue between past and
present, where archaic echoes and contemporary visions coalesce into a single, fluid
temporality.
Elias Njima’s paintings unfold with the continuity of a novel, sequential and narrative,
imbued with an undercurrent of tension. In one, the crimson radiance of a ceiling lamp
illuminates a man’s visage while rendering peripheral figures indistinct. In another,
blossoms appear opulent yet verge on decay. Each composition induces a suspension,
compelling the imagination to extend beyond the pictorial field. The compositions shift
attention from daily reality to the hidden corners of memory, where the most distant past
meets the nearest future, and where every emotion depends on the right balance of
elements.
Ṣọlá Olúlòde’s work is suffused with fluidity, of gender, of relationship, of presence. Often,
two figures intertwine yet retain their autonomy, even as they bathe in memories of
intimacy, forming a quiet sense of unity. By illuminating these tender, everyday moments,
Olúlòde reveals connections that resonate profoundly, held in the delicate balance of not
too far, not too close.
Zhang Shangfeng’s work embodies this delicate tension: a man who is growing up yet
never fully grown, a confrontation that is at once violent and tender. In one painting, an
adult man squeezes into clothes a size too small, hands on his hips as if imitating maturity; in
another, a seemingly powerless figure wields a scepter studded with nails. Not too far, not
too close, this is the distance of becoming, suspended between childhood play and adult
gravity, between vulnerability and resistance to the world.
In Valdrin Thaqi’s painting, a woman reclines beside a window, accompanied by her own
sculptural likeness. Beyond her lies an expansive lake and verdant terrain, yet her
countenance remains pensive, tinged with melancholy. Far enough to glimpse the
vastness beyond, close enough to drift into the quiet of her mind.
Each scene appears poised on the edge of revelation, as if something will happen soon,
yet time must still pass. Not too far, not too close, just about to happen.
This is also the balance at which the artists create, between internal experience and
external reality. Their works occupy the threshold where closeness offers intimacy and
distance grants perspective. In stillness, the quiet moments of everyday life are examined,
where the mind lingers on the smallest details and beauty emerges from simplicity. Here,
not too far, not too close becomes more than a concept; it becomes a way of perceiving,
of moving through time - where we’ve been, where we are now, and where we are
going. It is an invitation to linger, to sense, to understand, to feel, to meet life in its quiet
moments, suspended in the grace of measured distance.
Zhimin Zhang