Matter Before Representation
Devid Biscontini’s work arrests the viewer through a contradiction: industrial plastic, one of the most ordinary substances of contemporary life, appears here as skin, fossil, wound, membrane, and apparition. The sculptures refuse the polished neutrality often associated with synthetic material, replacing it with heat-scarred surfaces that look exposed, breathing, and unstable. Across the submitted images, figures emerge from fused sheets, translucent veils, torn cavities, glossy accumulations, and chromatic eruptions. Some works carry the frontal intensity of icons, while others turn sideways, withdraw, or seem suspended between body and remnant. The black photographic backgrounds heighten this effect, isolating each object as if it had been excavated from darkness rather than fabricated in a studio. This visual strategy gives Biscontini’s practice immediate significance within contemporary sculpture, because it transforms plastic from a symbol of consumption into a medium of memory, resistance, and post-industrial metamorphosis.
The most compelling formal feature of these works is their refusal to separate surface from structure. Color does not sit politely on top of form; it appears embedded, burned through, stretched, revealed, and sometimes violently interrupted. In the white figure split by a vertical red channel, the sculpture reads less as a painted body than as a body opened by color itself. The red fissure becomes a sign of interior pressure, while the surrounding white plastic resembles a covering that both protects and conceals. In the red figure marked by blue, yellow, and black, chromatic energy spreads like a force acting upon anatomy, not decoration applied afterward. Biscontini’s statement that he does not paint on plastic, but that plastic becomes painting, finds its strongest visual confirmation in such works. The paint-like event is inseparable from burning, contraction, fusion, and collapse.
This method places Biscontini at a productive boundary between painting and sculpture, yet the work is strongest when it does not need to defend that hybrid status. The figures, busts, fragments, and abstracted forms already demonstrate that the categories are insufficient. Their surfaces recall material painting, Informalism, and the historical liberation of non-traditional materials, while their bodily presence anchors them in sculptural encounter. The work also carries an unmistakable contemporary charge, since plastic is not neutral matter; it is bound to industry, excess, environmental anxiety, and the manufactured conditions of modern life. Biscontini does not treat that association as didactic content. Instead, he allows it to remain active inside the forms. The plastic is visibly transformed, but never fully redeemed into beauty. Its artificial origin persists, giving the sculptures their unsettled force and preventing them from becoming merely expressive objects.
