A community, whether country, city or enterprise, is often perceived and presented to the outside world as a univocal and coherent whole. Uni
‘Solidare’ - solid, dense, hard, strong and, in the transitive sense, ‘to form a whole’, ‘to unite’, is the origin and the meaning of the ter
Since the Renaissance, inventio(n) has been a key concept in Western art. The painter, sculptor, architect, once a craftsman, became a "free
The ‘public cause’, the political organisation of society, must be the central concern of all forms of power. Parliaments are its vital heart
The terms ‘radical’ and "radicalism" have long had positive connotations. They come from the Latin word ‘radix’, root. Progressive groups wer
In a world with limited natural and social resources, the search for a balance between well-being and prosperity requires constant reflection
Just like mirroring, ‘reflection’ needs a counterpart. Reflection arises from the friction of encounters and can only take place when there i
Research, often limited to the empirical and scientific sphere, refers in fact to any gathering of data initiated by a question. This essenti
Civilisations don’t appear out of nowhere and never reach a point of completion. They are created, grow and are renewed through cultural exch
From women’s emancipation to homosexual and transgender rights. In our society, relational patterns between and among the sexes are becoming
From a technocratic point of view, the term ‘mobility’ refers to road works, trucks, trains and airports. But mobility is also an existential
"Dura lex, sed lex", the law is hard, but it is the law. In a law, words appear in their most authoritarian and normative form. That is why i
Interpersonal exchanges, whatever their form, have constantly shaped civilisations; economic exchanges often being predominant. Yet individua
Concordia - literally "with heart" – concord – is what this exhibition is intended to show. The search for harmony between and within communi