Past Resident
2014: Artadia

D-L Alvarez

D-L Alvarez’s work follows multiple paths. He engages in the promotion of the works of artists and writers he admires through curating exhibitions, collaborations, editing the magazine project Number Two, writing articles, teaching, and currently directing the short film The Visitor Owl based on a script by Kevin Killian and performed by his troop of campy non-actors, the San Francisco Poets Theater.  The second path is becoming more private, and centers on pleasures of drawing from history. His instinct to build stages for other people’s work developed developed from a background in set design and construction.  

Andrea Mastrovito

Andrea Mastrovito’s work deals with reinventions of painting and drawing  and of their supports, from a single sheet to the whole gallery in a continuous dialogue with the cycle of life. His work unravels from the studio to public spaces, in an open confrontation with audience and communities.

Andrea Mastrovito was born in Bergamo in 1978. He received his MFA in 2001 from Accademia Carrara di Belle Arti, Bergamo. He won the New York Prize, awarded by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2007 and the Moroso Prize in 2012 . He installed solo shows in private galleries in Milan, Florence, Paris, Geneva, Brussels, and New York and his most recent public solo shows includes At the End of the line, GAMEC, Bergamo; La libertè guidant le peuple, Pavillon Blanc, Colomiers and Le Cinque Giornate, Museo del Novecento, Milan. His works have also been included in many group exhibitions all across Europe and United States: MAXXI National Museum of the 21st century and Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome; Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Rovereto; Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester; B.P.S. 22, Charleroi; Museum of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts, Lausanne and the Museum of Art and Design, New York.

Past Resident
2014: Meg-Multiforms, The Gallery Apart

Alice Schivardi

Alice Schivardi is interested in collecting stories and establishing human relationships, leading her toward a pursuit of the other as well as of the self.  She focuses both on the natural and human condition, using technological and manual language. Schivardi’s work explores social phenomena and their logic, with a methodology that treasures the intimate exchange of micro-experiences. The threads of her “embroidery drawings” become a link between the artist and the stories, the artistic process and the finished artwork. Alice Schivardi lives and works in Rome.