ITSLIQUID Group is pleased to announce the opening of the 17th edition
of ROME INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR 2025, international exhibition of
photography, painting, video art, installation/sculpture and
performance art. The exhibition will open to the public on December
05, 2025, at 06:00 PM at Medina Art Gallery in Rome, and will run
until December 18, 2025. ROME INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR 2025 analyzes the
relationship between body and space, and the hybridization between
identities and cultural/physical/social/urban settings in contemporary
times, through two main sections: MIXING IDENTITIES and FUTURE
LANDSCAPES. MIXING IDENTITIES analyzes the hidden parts of our
identities, through an immersive experience inside the fascinating
universe of the complex labyrinths of our consciousness. The human
body is a changing system that connects us with other bodies and
spaces to perceive the surrounding reality; a strong communication
system with its own language and infinite ways of expression. FUTURE
LANDSCAPES are abstract, infinite and conceptual, associated with a
sense of freedom and infinite extension. Primarily experienced with
the mind, spaces redefine their limits and borders, transforming
surfaces in an open flow of pure ideas. This section focuses on the
concept of the borders and the structures between body, mind and soul,
the human identity and the city, the space and the ground. Across
their diverse practices, the over forty selected artists from around
the world embody the core themes of the ROME INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR
2025, each offering a distinct perspective on the evolving
relationship between body, identity, and space. From Turkey, Cenk
Akaltun draws on his background in screen printing and graphic design
to develop an organic, process-driven pictorial language inspired by
the spiritual symbolism of water. Its fluidity, chromatic merging, and
dual role as both life-giving and destructive inform compositions that
behave like living organisms, evoking ecosystems that span from the
microscopic to the urban scale. Each painting functions as a unified
spiritual structure, where individual elements gain meaning only
through their connection to the whole. With a similar background yet
different results, Steffen Wagner- a Berlin-based artist and graphic
designer - merges typography with a refined minimalist aesthetic:
rooted in drawing, his practice has evolved into a deep investigation
of letterforms and their expressive potential. Through posters,
sketches, and experimental typographic systems, Wagner seeks clarity,
rhythm, and emotional impact, treating visual design as a tool for
dialogue and empowerment, and affirming creativity as a boundless
force. Xu Kangyi’s photographic practice began as an instinctive way
to preserve fleeting moments charged with quiet emotion: moving
between Macau and Boston, she gravitates toward silhouettes, natural
light, and delicate tableaux where stillness reveals human
vulnerability. Often portraying solitary figures or subtle exchanges
between strangers, her images explore identity as a fluid entity
shaped by memory and place. Rather than isolating her subjects, she
lets them blend with shadow, reflection, and architectural space,
inviting viewers to find echoes of their own experiences. Similarly
guided by the idea that everything in life is connected, Mirela
Lesneanu investigates the parallels between human bodies and organic
structures using collage, printmaking, ink, acrylics, and photography
to reflect on ancient nature symbolism, cycles of death and renewal,
and the belief in the sentience of trees. Her layered mixed-media
compositions take viewers to look beyond appearances and rediscover
their kinship with the natural world, transforming personal reflection
into a universal meditation on belonging. Within this context, Rome
once again becomes an active interlocutor between its centuries of
cultural memory, amplifying the narrative power of the contemporary
works on display. In this setting, Artur Mirzoyan’s practice
resonates with particular intensity, combining rigorous academic
technique with the immediacy of a cinematic key frame, through which
he reinterprets symbolic motifs from classical European art. Using
precise silhouettes, smooth contours, and a deep, varied colour
palette, often enriched with gilding, his compositions uncover the
drama embedded in a single moment, suspended between movement and
stillness, expanding the language of classical painting and opening
new pathways for visual storytelling.
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09/12/2025 Last update