Open: Tue-Sat 11am-7pm

87 rue du Temple, 75003, Paris, France
Open: Tue-Sat 11am-7pm


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Ornaghi & Prestinari: Blursday

Galleria Continua Marais, Paris

Fri 24 Jan 2025 to Wed 19 Mar 2025

87 rue du Temple, 75003 Ornaghi & Prestinari: Blursday

Tue-Sat 11am-7pm

Artist: Ornaghi & Prestinari

GALLERIA CONTINUA presents Blursday, the new solo exhibition by the artist duo Ornaghi & Prestinari, in its Paris exhibition space in the heart of the Marais.

Installation Views

The title of the exhibition refers to the English neologism Blursday, coined to describe the temporal and emotional disorientation experienced during the lockdowns imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, when the days of the week seemed to blur into a single indistinct sequence. For Ornaghi & Prestinari, the term becomes a metaphor for an abstract condition in which time loses its linearity, and the boundaries between yesterday, today, and tomorrow dissolve, giving rise to a blurred and undefined emotional state. Decontextualized here, the term outlines the suspended atmosphere and sense of displacement that permeate the exhibition.

Valentina Ornaghi and Claudio Prestinari began working together in 2009, driven by the desire to develop each project through dialogue and collaboration. The multidisciplinary approach they refined during their education, combined with their interest in design, architecture, and art history, has become an integral part of their research. The work of Ornaghi & Prestinari explores the domestic, fragile, and intimate dimension of objects. Their practice moves between concept and action, with particular attention to materials and their manipulation. Delicacy, care, lightness, and irony are recurring themes in their works.

The exhibition is structured in the space through works that evoke a state of uncertainty. In the Sbilenco series, the canvases are misaligned from their frames, destabilizing the precision of the geometric pattern through the imperfection of the diagonal arrangement. This principle recurs throughout the exhibition, with works featuring distorted proportions, irregular shapes, or centerless compositions, subverting the Cartesian structure of the frame, with rules that are systematically contradicted.

The same idea of extending the work beyond the visual space of the canvas, playing with combinations of fullness and emptiness, also emerges in the triptych Non c’entra niente (Nothing to do with it), where the white space between the three canvases suggests a continuous and potentially infinite design. The rhythmic sequence of arrows, leaning against each other like dominoes, alludes to the temporality inherent to the idea of blursday, where the boundaries of the days dissolve and waver. Through these compositional devices, the artists propose a broader reflection on art itself, conceived not as a vehicle for definitive answers but as a space to pose open questions, stimulate diverse perspectives, and trace new trajectories.

Ornaghi & Prestinari focus on those everyday things that, thanks to the emotional value attributed to them, transcend their nature as mere objects. This concept is fully expressed in Vespertino, a sculpture combining a piece of furniture made by reusing wood from a 1960s piece, a small beam, a vase, and a golden, withered olive branch. The leaves that have fallen from the branch are transformed into inlays on the wooden shelf below, while some also appear in the drawer, alluding to the ability of things to preserve and evoke memories and emotions.

The overall sense of disorientation evoked by the artworks is heightened by the pages of newspapers scattered chaotically around them. This visual landscape suggests the idea of a fragmented and confused chronicle, referencing the frenetic scrolling movement on smartphones, where news mixes into an indistinct and continuous flow. The chaotic arrangement of the pages also recalls a famous scene from Nanni Moretti’s film Aprile, in which the protagonist, after the birth of his child, throws into the air articles accumulated over more than twenty years, overturning the preexisting order to make room for a new vision of life, completely transformed by the experience of parenthood.

Through a visual language imbued with irony and delicate tones, the contrast between heterogeneous materials makes a form of emotional tension tangible. Ornaghi & Prestinari thus explore the fragility and strength of bonds, revealing how their intrinsic instability paradoxically generates a form of mysterious balance.

About the artists:

Valentina Ornaghi and Claudio Prestinari were born in 1986 and 1984, respectively, in Milan, where they live and work. Since forming their artistic duo in 2009, Ornaghi earned a degree in Industrial Design, and Prestinari in Architecture from the Politecnico di Milano, later continuing their studies at IUAV University of Venice.

Ornaghi & Prestinari - Blursday exhibition view, Galleria Continua, Paris Marais. Photo: Hafid Lhachmi © ADAGP Paris, 2025.

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