Anatomie Digitali moves like a scalpel across the body of digital culture. The six sections – gesture, performance, animation, glitch, artificial intelligence and code hybridisation – mark a surgical investigation into the relationship between body, image and technology. Each work is an organ of a complex organism, highlighting the precision, obsession and subtle irony with which digital technology shapes our perception of reality. In the end, the digital organism shows its muscles… and its exposed nerves.

“The horrid Arno,” wrote Dante.
Today, Tommaso Cherubini observes it through hydrometry, temperature and rainfall records, transforming them into generative images and sounds. In Invisible Ecologies, the Arno no longer flows only in its riverbed, but also on the screens of Rifugio Digitale, becoming a signal, a vision, a parallel organism.
In Florence, the river no longer divides the banks but divides time, between what we were and what we are becoming.
A project by Forma Edizioni, produced with the support of MiC and SIAE as part of the ‘Per Chi Crea’ programme, with the contribution of Publiacqua.


The Quantum Effect does not forgive naivety. Here, technology is not an accessory, it is the judge: videos, immersive installations, generative works and physical interventions shape perception, time and identity in a quantum way, where reality and possibility coexist. Each room challenges linearity, mixing memory and future, digital and physical, and leaves the viewer with the feeling of having crossed overlapping worlds that are impossible to ignore. It is destabilising, surprising and provocative: 21st-century art does not merely show something, but forces us to rethink the way we perceive reality.
Born in 1999, she is an educator and museum mediator. She graduated in Art History from the University of Florence with a thesis on the concept of reproducibility in crypto-art. She currently works in various cultural institutions in Tuscany, including the Palazzo Strozzi Foundation, the Luigi Pecci Centre for Contemporary Art, the Pistoia Museums Foundation and the Textile Museum.