Natura Inversa
In Natura Inversa (Inverse Nature), Remoi’s Natura Futura collection explores a dimension of logical and visual reversal, where natural elements and geometric structures swap roles within a suspended, surreal landscape. In this composition, the artist moves away from the vertical fluidity of the Cascate to build an asymmetrical balance that challenges the perception of space, placing the viewer before a world where the natural order has been reconfigured.
The scene is dominated on the left by an imposing rock face or glacier, rendered with an extreme materiality that seems to push beyond the borders of the canvas. The layers of deep blue, white, and gray are applied almost brutally, creating sharp ridges that simulate the hardness of stone or the frozen stillness of ice. This organic and chaotic mass contrasts sharply with the clear, two-dimensional blue sky filling the rest of the background, streaked by a thin, stylized rain falling like digital code or a rain of fixed stars.
At the center of the landscape, the theme of the perspectival cube returns as the centerpiece of Remoi’s inquiry. The base of the work consists of an irregular checkerboard of colored blocks—red, green, yellow, white, and black—resembling an urban topography or an artificial terrain. From one of these cubes, perched upon a small green hill, emerges a bare, black tree, similar to a network of veins or an antenna. Unlike Albero su Cubo, here nature appears stripped down, reduced to its structural essence, as if indicating a silent resistance in an environment dominated by geometric decomposition. Natura Inversa is a work that questions the future of the environment: a silent dialogue between the raw force of the mountain and the fragility of a life seeking to take root atop a reality now fragmented into cubes of color.