Recently the 4th Forgotten Project’s artistic intervention took place in Rome. Previous themes of the project were neglected areas, former factories and little stations. This time the urban art project focused on shut down cinemas in Rome, whose future in uncertain and which have been ‘forgotten’.
On February 19th, 20th and 21st those ‘urban ghosts’ became the striking setting of Miguel Januario’s temporary art installations. Since 2005, Miguel Januário’s provoking project ±MAISMENOS± is making people think about social, economic and anthropological issues of contemporary society through an equation of contrasts: plus/minus, positive/negative, black/white.
By making black stripes of paper, stencils and spray-cans available to passers-by, the artist gave them the chance to write down their own ideas about cinema. The final result was stunning: words as seals on the front doors of the forgotten cinemas in the city center of Rome. The actions happened at the ex-cinema Metropolitan (Piazza del Popolo), at the ex-cinema Pasquino (Trastevere) and at the ex-cinema Sala Troisi (Porta Portese).
This artistic installation, which is named Lights Cinema Auction, took shape little by little, within a few hours, thanks to the passers-by’s inputs about the topic of ‘cinema’. There were a different cinema, a different public and several different suggestions for each day, by those who entered that doors so many times in the past and by those people who never went inside those spaces, either.
In order to involve the local community, a cinema-themed treasure hunt took place on saturday night around the alleys of Trastevere neighborhood, which was organized in collaboration with Together, Macine, Cinescope and TrastevereAttiva, and more than 30 teams hunting.
The video of the artistic intervention was presented last monday at Casa del Cinema, within the conference “il cinema italiano che ama le sue sale e le difende” (the Italian cinema that loves its movie theaters and protect them), which was attended by the artist himself as well as by delegates of Anec del Lazio, Agis nazionale, Anac, 100Autori, Sindacati dei Critici e dei Giornalisti, Rete degli Spettatori, Fondazione Cinema per Roma and more.
In this occasion, ±MAISMENOS±’ silkscreen print – which had been specifically conceived for his interventions in Rome – was officially presented to the public. A limited edition of silkscreen prints, signed and numbered by the artist, is available at our website http://www.forgottenproject.it/en/fundraising-en/
Forgotten is an urban art project that aims to put in the spotlight some roman buildings that for reasons mainly related to the times, the expansion of the city, the changing of habits of the citizens have lost their function or have an uncertain future and risk to be “forgotten” despite of their central location.
Five urban artists of the Portuguese contemporary art scene, much appreciated in Europe and in the world, were invited to do their first artwork in Rome, on the facades of buildings selected in order to offer food for thoughts, both for the single building and the building type they represent.
This project, promoted by MACRo (Rome’s Contemporary Art Museum), is organized under the patronage of the Embassy of Portugal, the Cultural Department of the City of Rome, with the help of the House of Architecture in Rome, the Cultural Institute Camões, and the fundraising campaign.
Technical Sponsor: Tap Portugal, Silkprint
Cultural Partner: Together
Special thanks to: Casa del Cinema, Macine, Cinescope, Trastevere Attiva
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