The Etymology of Silence
Controra is not merely an artistic pseudonym; it is a philosophical chronotope. In Southern Italy, the "controra" defines the sacred and harsh interval of the early afternoon: the moment when the zenith sun assaults the landscape, resets time, and forces life into a mandatory retreat within the shadows. Within this vacuum, the artist — aged thirty-seven and based in Lecce — has established an elective laboratory for an inquiry that transcends geography to become universal.
The Poetics of Meridiano Zero
At the heart of Controra’s work lies Meridiano Zero, a metaphysical exploration of light and absence. Influenced by Giorgio de Chirico, the author removes the human figure from the frame to amplify its spectral trace. His architectures are not simple buildings but pure volumes emerging from a black abyss; his objects — sun-drenched laundry, abandoned hats, carved marbles — cease to be functional and begin to exist as "pure presences". In this suspension, the everyday loses its familiar traits and reveals itself in its alien majesty.
Technical Rigor and Visual Synthesis
The choice of a rigorous black and white is not a concession to nostalgia but a necessity for plastic synthesis. Through an extreme use of contrast and meticulous dynamic range management, Controra carves space, turning vertical light into a solid element that defines thresholds and boundaries. His lens isolates the detail — a rope knot, a stone pupil, a long shadow — forcing the viewer to confront the blinding silence of the "Meridiano Zero".
International Horizons
Despite a visceral connection to the stone of Salento, Controra’s work shuns all forms of folklore, speaking the transnational language of spatial metaphysics. His trajectory toward international circuits, including participations in global collective exhibitions across Paris, New York, and Barcelona (Imagenation), reflects a research that questions the human condition through its own disappearance.