EUROPEAN NIGHT AT MADXI
Art, Music and Poetry for PEACE
At the Contemporary Art Museum of Latina, the museum opens at night with musical and literary events:
Mic And Drop “Assalto Lirico GAZA non può morire”, a poetic-literary event curated by Massimo de Martino, and a concert-performance by the dreamlike sound duo DOS with Annalisa De Feo and Livia De Romanis.
ARTISTS & MUSEUMS FOR PEACE MAD DONNA 2026: Thirty artists exhibited alongside the MADXI contemporary art collection, curated by Fabio D’Achille.
Participating artists: Paola Acciarino, Stefania Beltrami, Ornella Boccuzzi, Natasha Bozharova, Germana Brizio, Raffaella Caminiti, Rossana Carturan, Antonella Catini, Lavinia Cestrone, Claudia Chittano, Alessandra Chicarella, Cleonice Gioia, Laura Giusti, Maria Rita Laurenti, Annalisa Lazzarotto, Marina Mangiapelo, Monica Menchella, Roberta Modena, Marta Paladini, Silvia Palamara, Alena Panchishin, Nicoletta Piazza, Donatella Pinocci, Flora Rucco, Marianna Carolina Sale, Ersilia Sarrecchia, Mirella Sperduti, Daisy Triolo, Fabiana Tornesi, Piera Vertecchi.
The exhibition is dedicated to the memory of the artist Annalisa Lazzarotto, who left us prematurely. Critical text by art historian Francesca Piovan:
“How many of those girls and young women would have wanted to become artists?
How many of them could have left an important, strong, and delicate mark of their fragile yet already tempered existence?
This is the question that must move artistic consciences, annihilated by so much enduring violence.
The world, understood as a timeless collective, has been deprived, plundered, robbed of that feminine touch, of those voices that become echoes shouted from another dimension, relatively distant to us.
It is from this premise that Art becomes a visual testament, which crosses us, exhorts us, and animates us.
From this premise arises the need for choral, united, and unifying interventions.
And again, the need to make the experience of peace a concrete process, going beyond the theoretical, often divisive, concept of it; averting the mutation of thought and permanent perception of ideological imprisonment to which we are subjected.
Art becomes prayer. Universal communication. Pacifist language. Critical consciousness. Social responsibility.
At the same time, the Museum, a sacred place for the Muses, is no longer merely a container. It becomes a surface to project those prayers, languages, and consciences.
A conventionally and silently liturgical place dresses in noise, color, voices, and a single great belonging.” (FP)