Search This Blog

Thursday 20 December 2012

My wishes for the 2013...

This year’s best wishes go to something intangible and so real: the Energy.
Energy is what connects us with the self, the self with other people and to the Universe. If we are connected, we can feel, see, choose, enjoy…



© Maria Teresa Salvati

Imagine Energy as a little friend that jumps and runs around the body, from heart to head, from hands to feet, from gut to tongue…
In order to keep alive and smiley, this friend needs to circulate freely from one gate (AKA Chakras) to the other, and go around our body, mind and soul, candidly.
It happens to be tempted to close those gates now and then as a perceived form of protection from something external that has hurt us. But, we’ve got to trust this little friend and try to keep these gates always wide open. It’s a matter of exercise in order to create new habits. We learn to close these doors as a matter of exercise, so we can learn the other way around too, according to the rules of conscious evolution.

The relationship with this little friend shapes our thoughts, which shapes the way we see the world, which shapes the way we act and feel, which shapes the Energy we put into things, which shapes what we attract, and so on…

Thoughts are very important. “Select your thoughts, as you are selective with someone you kiss!” (Mark England)

My best wish for the 2013 is for all of you to discover this little friend, establish a trustworthy relationship and surrender to it...something very special might happen!! ;-)

Be Merry!

Tuesday 3 January 2012

Bringing a bit of Coney Island to London

This is the first of (hopefully) a series of independent experiments of people that share a passion for performing arts and photography. Our ambition is to create experiences tout-court into performing art, photography and every other medium that is functional to make the audience travel with us, either to real places or to imaginary worlds.
In December we brought a bit of Coney Island to London with photographs by Francesca Tosarelli, mixed and enhanced by various other performances; from of a lost princess on the train, to a fire-breather, an amazing singer and storyteller and an artist performing the 'isolation' (in that order: Mika Hockman, Lewis Davidson, Simone Douani, Francesca Martello).
Francesco Caradonna and I curated and art directed the show/exhibition. We had loads of fun!
A beautiful edit of the night can be viewed here: Vimeo Video: First Stop Coney Island




Maria Teresa Salvati and Francesco Caradonna, by Francesca Tosarelli
The Re-Birth of Coney Island

The journey to Coney Island begins with a twinkle into Francesca Tosarelli's inquisitive mind. While in New York, Francesca heard that the famous Coney Island was re-opening to the public with the new fun fair (Luna Park), so driven by curiosity and the desire to meet these mythical stories in person, she jumped on the train. 
Coney Island is a legendary place by the seaside, just an hour from Manhattan. At the beginning of the last century this place was called "Sodom by the sea" for its fame as the base for back-packers, eccentrics and oddballs. Known for the old "Luna Park" (partially constructed by Italians), Coney Island is an attraction for the weird and wonderful shows it puts on.

Photo by Francesca Tosarelli
This is the place for strong emotions, for humiliations and sublimations, for crashed dreams and touched heavens, for nothing, for everything, for legends and tales, for brothels, carousels and merry-go-round.
Here is home for hybrid cultures: American and Hispanic identities fuse and disguise offering the most stereotyped peaks for each of the two. Sizes, lights, bemusement, noise and rides are the container in which families, kids, old and young people, "contemporary freaks" and working class meet regularly and perform dreams and shows. 
Tolerance, confusion, smiles, comfort, friendliness, music, fire-eaters and foolery are the natural soul. This is the norm. You feel immersed in their world, and joy and amusement pervade your soul too, feeling yourself part of those families.

Photo by Francesca Tosarelli
Coney Island has become once again a cheap meeting place especially for Afro-Americans and Hispanics, but the Island still exudes a peculiar and extraordinary charm, a zone apart, inhabited by those souls which, besides the vibrant energy, can still feel lonely. We are in America, after all.


Photo by Francesca Tosarelli






















All prints are 40 x 60 cm + foam board 1cm and are available for sale at £180 inc. VAT, each.
It is possible to view the entire exhibition at Primi Restaurant.


Sunday 18 December 2011

I wish you...


My 2011 has been a year of transition!!

Transition from a state of acceptance to a state of dissent. From the visible to the invisible. From the conscious to the unconscious. From dragging what’s left of the past to closing and making space to newness. From taking it for granted to gaining it every day. From the known to the unknown and everything that this carries: responsibilities, fears, challenge in confidence, excitement and stimulation…

It’s been intense and this is still work in progress, and probably it will still be when the 365 will transit into the 01! I feel, though, that the 2012 will be the year of the harvest. It has to be…! Well, I hope so!



This year’s best wishes go to all those that have been beside me in this motion towards something new, even just for an instant, even just by listening to my long palavers, or patiently assisting to the sometimes-incomprehensible dramas, with a smile…And to those that, like me, feel like little fawns: naked and fragile, vulnerable and tender, but sure to be on the right path...

...and to those that are raging against something wrong and corrupted, a special thanks for making us dream and hope for a better future! Stay safe...

Merry Christmas and peaceful 2012, my dearest friends and sidekicks!

Monday 24 October 2011

Unconditional Love

Photo by Maria Teresa Salvati


“Nothing you become will disappoint me; I have no preconception that I'd like to see you be or do. I have no desire to forsee you, only to discover you. You can't disappoint me” 
Mary Haskell


Unconditional love is the foundation for a strong character, a person that will face the world with an inner sense of strength and peace.
Those who miss that, will search for it in other people for the rest of their lives...



Wednesday 19 October 2011

How Laura Hynd learned to Let Go


When I first heard Laura Hynd presenting her work ‘The Letting Go’, I felt a shiver down my spine. I was particularly touched by the sincerity, the naked soul coming through her eyes and the vulnerability of her voice as she talked about relationships with family, friends, lovers, siblings, people and especially herself.
I could see what she was voicing in all the beautiful photos she was presenting.

This is a beautiful story of photography as a form of healing, new discovery and self-awareness.

Laura started by saying “my life had unraveled and I needed to knit it back together… to understand and see with new eyes in order to move on.”

Photo by Laura Hynd


I have been thinking of her work for a while; it was extremely fascinating, together with the story behind it. I could empathize with that story too, so I wanted to discover more. When I met her again we immediately connected and decided to talk further about the whole project.

This is the story of every woman, if not person, who at a certain point in life has doubts. Questions life and events, and wants to discover the reason of many things: why lovers have left, disappointments, things that don’t always go as planned, why people hurt others and why we are not satisfied with what we have and who we are.
Often these questions are left unanswered, but Laura wanted to explore further and decided to embark on this journey of discovery.

The idea behind this project came from a need to explore her notions of photography alongside a desire to explore a much more personal side of her creativity.
’The Letting Go’ stemmed from wanting to focus on perceptions of women, which soon led to others' perceptions of me and my own self-perceptions. The difference is quite extreme.”

“I wanted to really celebrate women, and so started working on my own bodily self esteem, which I should have been celebrating but instead had spent years worrying about.”

“Since beginning this series I have also photographed many men, and a lot of them have photographed me…I can look back at all of the shoots with men and women and identify my role in the relationship... sister, muse, lover, friend, mentor, daughter etc.”

Photo by Laura Hynd


The journey of photographing was as amazing and inspiring as the result: “The feelings of liberation and trust resulted in an overwhelming amount of bonding in a very short time. It cemented many friendships, healed past problems and gave me an extreme amount of faith in people.
‘I wanted to let go of my control of a shoot, so at the beginning of the series, thought it would be fascinating to start each one with the same set up, take a couple of photographs and then allow the sitter/collaborator to do whatever they wanted. There were no rules.”

When you photograph someone, they put a huge amount of trust in you. You can explore, investigate and see their personalities with no filters or preconceptions.

Perception and self-perception are at the centre of this beautiful story. Laura has always been fascinated by ones self-perception in contrast to the way they are perceived by others.
She says she grew up being insecure and unsure of herself. When being photographed (from childhood, right through her twenties), by family and friends she always disliked the results. Now, looking at those old photos, she wonders why.

I look at her and see so much beauty coming from her deep soul and her eyes, and wonder why too. Though at the same time I understand and empathise with that feeling.

“Often, social pressure, upbringing and personal experiences leave us with a warped or unfair view of ourselves” says Hynd. It’s only when you reach a level of maturity or when you really touch the bottom that you feel a push inside that forces you to investigate, do something, clean up and discover that no one has the right to let you down or make you feel insecure.

We all have something amazing inside – or outside - it’s just a matter of baring your soul, seeing with honest eyes and letting go.

Laura’s piece of advice to other people that may feel a connection - even with a little part of this story - is: “take risks, be brave! The worst that can happen is that you’ve learned something new…”

And, in this amazing journey of self-discovery, you might learn that sometimes it’s just a matter of acceptance of faults…and, as Leonard Cohen says:  “there’s a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in”!


Friday 14 October 2011

A conversation with eclectic artist Tiziana Salvati

I've know her since she's born and we have a blood connection, but I truly believe she's a very interesting and eclectic artist. I interviewed Tiziana Salvati and here it is what we conversed about.

In the past years she's been experimenting and focusing on animations in stop-motion, playing in Naples, Bari and Berlin as VJ.  Here there is a short demo:




Maria Teresa (MT): Your artwork is often dark. What's behind it?
Tiziana (T): Yes it is. And the reason is that it's rooted in the actuality. They reflect the times we live in today, and doubtlessly the human being is living a very difficult condition from many points of view.
Individulity is crashed, cities are not made for people, rather they become some kinds of shopping windows, in which many of us feel isolated and lonely.
The lost of humanity and the discomfort of living in this modern times are very dark.
Plus I live in a context that has many dark sides, Naples. Despite the sun, the mozzarella and the Vesuvio, it's a tough city.

MT: What or who inspires you? From a medium and-or content point of view?
T: I'm inspired by concepts, real life and the willingness to realise them visually, regardless of the medium, which can be photography, painting or multimedia.
I like to experiment. Most of the times I'm inspired by psycoanalysis, for example.
Good part of my work has been inspired by the concept of dualism of the human being and the I, in which two parts of the same personality are confronted.
Dualism in my work is completely gutted, for example through the long exposure photograps, in which I shoot actions and self-portraits in different positions.
The starting point is always introspective. Two figures are put in opposition, two I's that represent the components of the same person, sometimes come out, other times are dormant.
It's always the same body, but different parts of the mind communicate with one onother.
These parts can be introversion and extroversion, for example. We are used to think that we are either introverted or extroverted, so one excludes the other. On the contrary, I believe in the idea of  human beings as dynamic and subject to the time that passes by fluidly, so you can be both at different levels. Carl Jung is the psychoanalyst that I'm inspired by.


"I enjoy me" - Photo by Tiziana Salvati, Matera 2006

MT: what's the project that best reflects this concept of dualism?
T: The project that I've been working on since 2000, it's called "the cube", where I analyse content and container. The container is the body and everything in it, it's the content.
Though my work has changed a lot recently, I moved from long expsure photographs to animation in stop-motion.

MT: what has influenced the passage from these types of medium?
T: Maybe the need of evolving. I've always been interested in scanning the time. The long exposure is also about time and space; in fact, in those 6 seconds, there's something that happens and the body moves in a space that is scanned.

MT: What's your favourite medium? Why?
T: My favourite is painting. I think paint is a very intimate and therapeutic way of expressing what's inside, at least for me.

MT: Your last work it's a self-portrait paint - do you want to tell me something about it?
T: That's an excercise, a moment of therapy with myself, something very intimate.
Again, Carl Jung comes into the frame: he says that what distinguishes artists from nevrotics is the fact that artists are able to let it out, as opposed to nevrotics.
A self-portrait can be mystic process with yourself. Everybody should try it.




MT: What's your dream as an artis?
T: To make video installations in public spaces, streets and urban environments. I'm very interested in working with architects beacuse I love the concept of containers, spaces and urban developement as a way to make those spaces new, different. Cities that re-born and live in a different way, in a more human way, in which people interact with spaces and other people.

Contact: salvatiziana@tiscali.it
More work: http://www.giovaniartisti.it/salvati-tiziana?page=1

Tuesday 11 October 2011

Looking at things from outside

Sometimes you are too close to things to see them clearly.
For a moment you feel the urgency of extracting these things from the inside and try and see them with a colder sight.

It's not easy, especially if you are used to listen to your warmer and soft side. Sometimes you have to see things objectively, shut these sides down, see life with a pinch of objectivity and evaluate the opportunity of this or that choice.
It's like, paraphrasing a friend of mine "when everything seems confused, freeze".

Seat in the dark. Look, from the quiet of this place, at the confusion, the things moving fast, the light too bright inside and, somehow the context of peace in which you momentarily seat, helps to feel more peaceful inside too.


Self-Portrait by Maria Teresa Salvati

Sometimes you just need to breath, immerse in the quiet, see from the outside and that beautiful candle light will come back to warm you up and quietly suggest the right path...

Try.