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Florence's Cathedral, Santa Maria del Fiore, was the heart of the city during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Now it's merely a transit point for distracted tourists, and a mere shopping destination for Florentines heading to the city center. The spirituality that underpins the Baptistery ("the beautiful San Giovanni," as Dante Alighieri called it), Giotto's Bell Tower, the Golden Gate (described by Michelangelo as the "Gates of Paradise"),… and Brunelleschi's Dome has completely vanished. No one senses the beauty and harmony of these places anymore. Florence's historic center has been transformed into a giant fast food restaurant. Thirty-five years ago, when no one was talking about it yet, I identified and challenged this phenomenon of overtourism, which now affects all major art cities. Using 50 postcards of the Duomo's façade, collaged without any cuts but through an elaborate arrangement and superimposition, I created a new architecture that is unrecognizable overall.
Silvio Ricci is a self-taught painter who developed his skills through occasional courses and a deep personal study of techniques from the Renaissance to Hyperrealism. He uses a wide range of media, from pencil to watercolor, and his eclectic style adapts to his work, alternating between realism, expressionism, and abstraction. Ricci explores themes ranging from landscape to literary and religious symbolism, conveying emotions that invite philosophical reflection and question the limits of freedom and inspiration.