Eyddos Hilma Amarre Greba

Overall made of drill fabric 100% cotton. It has a contrasting front zip fastening. The sleeves are long, and the bottom has a conventional length. The fit is regular, noticeably accentuating the waist, while creating a wider silhouette around the hips.
Guido Ignatti, 2024. Aura Exhibition.

Asphalt
Regular price $2,000 USD
Sale price $2,000 USD Regular price

BIO - Guido Ignatti

Guido Ignatti was born in 1981 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

His artistic practice explores restriction and suspension. To reveal what a body can do, he binds it; to showcase the potential of abstract painting, he reduces it to its bare minimum. His work investigates bodies subjected to the working device, queer eroticism, and identity shaped by politicized bodies.

He founded Sauna, an art criticism magazine; Proyecto Bonzo —an exhibition platform set in houses slated for demolition in Buenos Aires—, and Demi-Monde, a roaming nightclub.

His work is part of national and international collections, many of which focus on Latin American abstraction.

He lives and works between Buenos Aires and Madrid.

Guido Ignatti

EXHIBITION AURA

Every creation is born from movement—not just physical movement as a simple action, but movement as a vital impulse: the urgency to generate something that gives meaning to our existence and understanding of the world. To create is to set in motion that network of thoughts and emotions, that human complexity in constant relationship with the environment—a process that involves giving, receiving, and returning. Aura and Negro emerge as symbiotic exhibitions that navigate this duality between light and darkness, between the visible and the invisible.

The concept of “aura” not only refers to the energetic field surrounding human beings but also to that illusion of authenticity that, according to Walter Benjamin, is lost in the reproduction of artworks. Aura is a timeless exhibition and, like everything we create, it is genderless. It reveals the continuous invisible thread between music and visual arts. Artists from around the world reflect on freedom, respect, and community in an increasingly chaotic global environment.

It is true: music is in our nature, and movement —that act of perpetual becoming— is what defines us. But in the context of Aura, the synesthesia of movement and color goes beyond mere sensory translation. Here, music does not just connect —it transforms, giving meaning to art as an act that is not only perceptual but also existential.

In this infinite network, the act of creation is not just individual; it is collective —in a deep, challenging, and therefore radical sense. Creation becomes a form of resistance. An act that transcends the limits of the known, is luminous, and all-connecting —just as it happens in Eyddos.