Pandemic Art

Tom Phillips
2 min readMar 5, 2022

Beauty from Bologna

Still from For a Dance Never Choreographed, 2021. Photo: Stefano Croci.

For artists and introverts, the Pandemic of 2020–22 was a window of opportunity — a chance to observe the world in the absence of normal human activity. During lockdown and quarantine periods, walking deserted streets or sitting in empty public spaces, we could suddenly see form without function — — the structure of civilization without its uses.

Italian artist-choreographer Luca Veggetti found himself stuck in his hometown of Bologna, Italy, when the pandemic struck in 2020. So he made something out of nothing.

Veggetti’s film For a Dance Never Choreographed (2021) takes place in an empty plaza designed by Isamu Noguchi, with a text of notes by Martha Graham for a dance she never made. The movement of the earth around the sun is represented by dark shadows creeping over the plaza, and the only human presence is the sound of voices crying, whispering, gasping and groaning — — expression minus words. The whole impression is made by taking things away, removing the contents of civilization and examining its substrate of earth and bricks, light and shade, desire and discontent.

The 22-minute film is now permanently on view in the digital collection of the Noguchi Museum in New York. To watch, click here.

And now — shhhh.

— Copyright 2022 by Tom Phillips

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Tom Phillips

Tom Phillips is a New York writer, journalist, and critic-at-large.