“Mala tempora currunt”: War enters the scene through the lens of Giuseppe Tamponi.
A Latin phrase that alone already conveys the full weight of the message it intends to conveyPer restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
Following last night's inauguration, the Komos restaurant in Oristano will open its doors to a photography exhibition that combines art, classical memory, and current events. Giuseppe Tamponi, a passionate photographer, will inaugurate the exhibition, titled "Mala tempora currunt," a Latin phrase that alone speaks volumes about the message it seeks to convey.
"I chose this title thinking back to the literature I studied at the De Castro Classical High School," Tamponi explains, "which, unfortunately, also represents our present." A present marked by war, the central theme around which the entire exhibition revolves, consisting of ten photographs taken during a street theater performance, staged in Santu Lussurgiu by the Theatre En Vol Company of Sassari.
The images capture the intensity of a performance built precisely on the drama of conflict and demonstrate how photography can capture the emotion of theater in a timeless moment. This isn't the first time this work has met with an audience in Oristano; the exhibition had already garnered acclaim this fall, as part of a group show promoted by Promo Arte Sardegna. This time, however, the photographs find a new and more intimate setting, within the welcoming space of Komos, with free admission.
Tamponi, a photographer by passion, pursues photography as a form of dialogue with the world: a personal look at life that he chooses to share, unfiltered and without barriers. And this is precisely what he emphasizes when he speaks of the deeper meaning of his work. "Photography is one of the most direct ways to narrate reality," he says. "A shot can express what words sometimes fail to express and can touch the viewer's heart." But there's something that goes beyond the image itself. "Exhibitions are precious opportunities to meet, to stop and talk, to discover that in front of a photograph we can find something in common. This is perhaps the greatest gift that art can give."
The exhibition will be open to visitors from today until February 28th.
