Titled Rock Chamber, this 8 metre-long, 5 metre-wide and 2 metre-high multifaceted polyhedron resembles a meteorite just fallen from space, its dark colour and sharp angles vigorously contrasting with the surroundings. Levy sees it as a natural continuation of his Rock sculptures, a series he has been working on throughout the years, experimenting with several multifaceted shapes and diverse materials. This time, however, the scale has been blown out of proportion, and instead of a quiet, muted presence in a corner of a room, Rock Chamber — slated to become part of the Fondazione's permanent collection — invades the space in a muscular, yet cold and precise fashion. Or as Levy terms it, "instead of us looking at it, it looks at us".
Covered in shiny, minute Bisazza black mosaics dotted with metallic specks, the volume's resemblance to a geode is complete once you are confronted with its interior, an excavated crater which Levy calls a "cave", covered entirely in acid green Kvadrat fabric and illuminated by one of the designer's Fractal Cloud lamps. The chosen few allowed to enter will discover an acoustically isolated, warm, comfortable space where the outside is completely shut out. "We are the primitives from the future," Arik Levy says, pointing out how, in years to come, our immediate surroundings will be "covered by the sands from the Sahara," and future civilisations will wonder at how we were and lived. "This is our future cave," he finally remarks.
Confronted with the other permanent installations at the Fondazione Bisazza, Experimental Growth is decidedly alien, and unquestionably breaks with the exaggerated figurative inclination of most other rooms, to a striking effect. The dark tones of the installation's highlight Rock Chamber are not ominous, but mysterious, and are certain to succeed in luring visitor's curiosity, which is undoubtedly rewarded when discovering the monolith's enticing core.
Confronted with the other permanent installations at the Fondazione Bisazza, "Experimental Growth" is decidedly alien, and unquestionably breaks with the exaggerated figurative inclination of most other rooms, to a striking effect