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    CELESTIAL ATTRACTION

    Philia to stage first solo show dedicated to
    French Designer and sculptor Jérôme Pereira
    during Milan Design Week

    At the crossroads of science and art,
    the designer sculpts wood to tell the tale of the universe

    Spazio CB32
    16-21 April 2024

    Tuesday-Saturday: 11.00-19.00
    Sunday: 11.00-17.00
    Free and Open to the public

    “To perceive the world in all its facets, poetic and scientific approaches complement each other. Each is important for understanding the world. Each, in its own way, gives us access to the wealth and beauty of the universe.” Hubert Reeves

    A year after the acclaimed Desacralized exhibition in the deconsecrated church of San Viore e 40 Marri, Philia returns to Milan Design Week with the first solo exhibition dedicated to the French designer and sculptor Jérôme Pereira, Celestial Attraction, on view at the Spazio CB32 (near Fondazione Prada) from 16 until 21 April, invites visitors to delve into the poetic universe of an artist trained in geophysics. Pereira’s lighting sculptures, which seamlessly blend art and science, illuminate some of today’s most distinctive interiors. Having explored the theme of sacredness in their last three Milanese exhibitions, Philia now proposes a reflection on the relationship between science and art – a question that has captivated philosophers since antiquity and has resulted in masterpieces, such as the works of Leonardo da Vinci.

    For his inaugural Milan show, Jérôme Pereira has conceived eight unique designs in his signature material: wood. Presented alongside two textile works by Sylvia Eustache Rools, also created especially for the exhibition, these pieces of raw beauty capture the artistic language developed by Pereira over the past twenty years – an organic aesthetics of lines and curves, particles and nuclei shaped by the laws of gravity and attraction. They also serve as a testament to the designer’s fascination with the cosmos, natural phenomena, and great scientific theories, from Archimedes’ inventions to Einstein’s discoveries.

    The concept of balance and the constants in physics lie at the heart of Pereira’s work.
    Similar to mathematical and physical equations, his “mobiles” in wood and glass achieve a subtle and delicate equilibrium. Four of these lighting sculptures will be unveiled in Milan, all constructed with tree branches and pieces of wood found in the forests near the designer’s studio in the South of France. The glass components have been produced in collaboration with a master glassmaker.

    As in Pereira’s seminal Planck chandelier (an homage to Max Planck, the originator of quantum theory, illustrated right), these monumental pieces draw inspiration from science and space. Named after asteroid nomenclature, SI-02 features a long, sculpted ash branch floating above the ground, illuminated at its top extremity by a round shape in blown glass. It is evocative of the meteorites and comets thought to be at the origins of life on Earth – a theme also explored in Messenger II. In this piece, an arched axis suspends, on one side, a delicate round blown glass pendant, and on the other, a large mass in which ash and oak wood combine to form a large, irregular, meteor-like shape. For Icarus, the designer imagined a frail wing made of an assembly of oak branches, with a round opaque glass light hanging “like a lantern in the depth of the interstellar night”.

    The four other pieces created for this exhibition – a table, a floor lamp, a tripod lamp, and a sculpture – highlight the importance of nature and the respect for living materials in Pereira’s practice. “Not working the wood but with the wood”, he embraces the natural lines and shapes of the material to produce pieces of imperfect beauty, bearing the traces of their fabrication.

    The passage of me and natural transformations are also central of Sylvia Eustache Rools’ work. In Milan, the artist will unveil new textile pieces – a wall hanging and a sculpture – both emblematic of her enigmatic silk creations. Resembling geological and archaeological artifacts, these works result from a process involving oxidation, vegetal macerations, and tinctorial explorations using ink and natural tannins.

    Ygaël Attali, co-founder of Philia says: “Jérôme Pereira‘s sculptural work embodies a tangible contemplation of the intricate interplay between balance and gravity. It is with immense pride that we host his inaugural solo exhibition, recognizing him as a prominent luminary in the realm of contemporary sculpture. The poetic and philosophical depth of his works adds a profound layer to the contemporary artistic landscape.”