Samsung has confirmed the launch of a Galaxy Watch 7 Ultra smartwatch

Samsung has confirmed the launch of a Galaxy Watch 7 Ultra smartwatch
Samsung has confirmed the launch of a Galaxy Watch 7 Ultra smartwatch
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The Jecza Gallery in Timișoara, together with the Interart Triade Foundation, magnetizes the public in Venice with a premiere exhibition in the city of the famous Art Biennale, reopening to visitors, after a decade, a space that is over 900 years old, with an exhibition highly appreciated by critics, collectors and art lovers.

One of the most interesting and appreciated artists of the new generation, of creators from Romania exhibits in Venice during the Art Biennale which is in full swing. Represented by the Jecza Gallery in Timișoara and the Ellen de Bruijne Projects gallery in Amsterdam, the visual artist Tincuța Marin presents her latest installation in a special space in the main city of the Veneto region.

This year, the Venice Art Biennale enjoys an interesting Romanian presence, which complements the main event. One of the artists exhibiting during the first month of the Biennale, until mid-May, is Tincuța Marin. The artist exhibits in a 12th century chapel – Oratorio dei Crociferi in Campo dei Gesuiti, Cannaregio. Closed to the public for 10 years, the chapel, which in itself is a work of art, is the host of the installation Where the Sun Sleeps (The place where the sun sleeps) created by the young artist.

“Tincuței Marin’s Where the Sun Sleeps installation is located in the middle of this Venetian jewel, which is not normally open to the public, housing an exceptional series of paintings by Giacomo Palma the Younger, made between 1583 and 1592, marking the height of the Venetian Renaissance. This pictorial cycle is notable for being one of the few in 16th-century Venetian art completed by a single artist, offering a unified artistic vision equaled only by the works of Tintoretto of the School of San Rocco.

Tincutea Marin’s work is composed of 4 bronze sculptures, which symbolically carry or protectively protect 4 large canvases”, declares Andrei Jecza, founder of the Jecza Gallery. Joining sculptures and painting in her installation, Tincuța Marin creates a support between the two, which differentiates her from other artists of her generation. The exhibition is open to the public until May 12, daily from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

About the installation Where the Sun Sleeps, Adina Drinceanu, curator of the exhibition, conveys that it appears on the threshold of the past and the present, against the historical background of the Oratory: “Tincuța Marin creates an anachronistic collage of time, similar to a full “wunderkammer” of eclectic temporal artifacts repurposed for new narratives.

Egyptian deities, medieval and modernist references are used not for their symbolic weight, but as elements in a larger pictorial lexicon that dances on the edge of phantasmagoria”.

* Aged 29, the artist from Galati lives and works in Cluj-Napoca and is represented by Jecza Gallery from 2021 and Ellen de Bruijne Projects from 2024. Tincuța Marin already has a rich exhibition record, with solo and group appearances in country and abroad, many of her works being found in important collections. Last year it was exhibited as part of the Timișoara 2023 – European Capital of Culture program within the Triade Foundation and the Jecza gallery, and in December it was presented to the American public at the Miami Untitled Art Fair, a landmark in the field of art collectors worldwide .

The article is in Romanian

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