Two years after her solo exhibition in its San Gimignano space, Galleria Continua is pleased to once again present the work of Alicja Kwade, one of today’s most influential contemporary sculptors. The exhibition, titled Vestigia, features works spanning different periods of the artist’s career, including some bronze sculptures from her most recent research. These pieces reflect on the cyclical, linear, and ultimately elusive nature of temporal experience, and its interdependence with natural and artificial systems. Some works appear as metaphorical traces—memories and experiences that weave together past, present, and future. Others, like Inner image (Finallyfound), preserve traces of lost civilizations. These works originate from a selection of the artist’s personal belongings —an iPhone, keys, sunglasses— encased within a block of schist. Their disappearance in the present and imagined archaeological rediscovery in an undefined future are materialized in this form. When, at some distant point in time, these fossilized objects are uncovered, neither their original function nor their names will be remembered; they will appear as unknown artifacts—timeless and mysterious.

The exhibition opens with two large sculptures, both titled Archibiont (2025). These works consist of solid, geometric, linear structures in dark metal that unexpectedly transform into organic forms. They blur boundaries and reveal recurring patterns found in nature-evoking an underlying systematic structure, like a hidden blueprint inherent in the world: copper-green tree bark and bronze antlers. Architecture, biology, metaphysics, and philosophy inspire Alicja Kwade’s new works. These are sculptures in a state of transformation, recalling Aristotle’s theory of hylomorphism-a philosophical concept exploring the relationship between matter, form, and existence within a natural body. The tensions within the supernatural elements of Archibiont allude to higher forces, universal laws, beauty, and chaos, which are in constant motion across earth and space.

Trait transference (2024): a rusted mirror hangs on the wall, its reflective surface bearing the marks of time. On the floor lies a metal slab, similarly altered by the passage of time and the forces of corrosion. Together, they create a visual dialogue between the ephemeral and the enduring, inviting reflection on the transience of existence. With this work, the artist reminds us that art serves as a means to question and explore profound ideas about the fabric of reality, while simultaneously challenging and expanding our perception.

Change, reorientation, and the possibility of transformation are the themes Kwade explores in another work on view, Kehrtwende (2021): a curved fragment of a wooden handrail mounted on the wall. Separated from its architectural context, this simple object takes on new meaning it marks a turning point, both literally and metaphorically (the title means “U-turn” or “reversal”). The artist invites us to pause and reflect on the moments in life when a change in direction occurs whether in thought, in time, or in physical space. As in much of her work, Kwade questions our perception of reality, trans-forming a familiar form into a silent but powerful reflection on movement, transition, and the structure of experience.