Neo-Gothic (modern)

Gothic, as an architectural style, was certainly born in the 18th century, but its charm and existential strength are much broader and more lasting. Gothic is a reference that is represented in different forms and places, from the dark light of medieval churches to towers and bridges that seem to come from a fairy tale. But Gothic is not only an architectural style, but also a way of seeing the world and feeling life. Gothic are the atmospheres of a Venice with its palaces and lagoon or of Paris and the Eiffel Tower that with its slender and sinuous features seems like a fantastic monster emerging from nowhere,

or the buildings of a Berlin cloaked in disturbing ghosts of the past, or the Brooklyn Bridge is an example of how Gothic can contaminate modernity and make it more fascinating with its tall and slender arched road, which seems to represent a sort of bridge between the real and the imaginary. Artistic research has the power to revive mysterious and fascinating “gothic” women, who seem to have come out of a page of Edgar Allan Poe or Emily Brontë, making them emerge from the shadows and fogs of a timeless atmosphere.

Recognition initials with measurements in centimeters

SETTING