Federica Galli was born in Soresina and spent her youth in the countryside around Cremona. Thence wath Testori calls her "lombardita' " or "padanita' ", the somehow over-whelming feeling of being born in the Lombard valley of the river Po. What is this feeling then? It is the result of, as Federica herself remembers, "perching on the apple's branches for hours on end, to understand trees".
Federica has then nature in herself, with nature she measures everything. In sheer excitement she searches in herself, in the nature which is part of herself, the remembrance and the confirmation of the inner truth that that very tree is the sign of peace she was looking for. But nature in her own blood has no dimension, no measure, it cannot be engraved on a copper plate. It needs a size to it, a measure, an excuse, a madeleine. A few lines will then suffice, a few dots to give the memory a size, a volume. Federica, who knows nature better than any of us, knows that nature can not be invented: and that its phenomena are not like the fixed rules of a well-known law. Nature's perfection, its absolute magnitude, reveals itself always new, unexpected, always surprising even to the artist who is its daughter and its lover. Federica knows that if she invented a tree which did not exist she would arrogate to herself a right which is not hers, she knows that she would betray the silent oath she took caressing the apple tree's bark. [from: "Federica Galli - Acqueforti", David Landau, Ed. Compagnia del disegno - Milano - oct. 1982] |