There is something deeply reassuring about visiting a marble workshop in Pietrasanta. Not reassuring in the nostalgic sense of “craftsmanship” as lifestyle aesthetics, but reassuring in a more fundamental way: the reminder that some forms of human creation still resist acceleration. Some weeks ago Jeanne and I were lucky enough to spend time with the fantastic artist Kevin Francis Gray at his Marble Projects workshop in Pietrasanta. We shared lunch among dust, stone fragments, half-finished sculptures and machines that somehow coexist with techniques stretching back centuries. Pietrasanta is one of those strange places where contemporary art and Renaissance infrastructure collapse into each other. The same mountains that supplied marble to Michelangelo still feed workshops producing works for contemporary galleries, collectors and museums around the world. What struck me most was the tension in Kevin’s works between the digital and the physical. His sculptures often feel almost computational — as if a 3D model had melted, folded or partially corrupted itself — and yet they emerge from one of the oldest and heaviest artistic materials imaginable: marble. In an age where so much culture risks becoming frictionless, weightless and infinitely reproducible, there is something almost radical about sculpture. Marble insists on resistance. Every cut is irreversible. Every mistake expensive. Gravity still matters. And perhaps that is also why places like Pietrasanta feel increasingly important. Not as museums of the past, but as reminders that technological modernity does not abolish material reality. It merely hides it from us for periods of time. Very much looking forward to Kevin’s upcoming visit to Copenhagen in connection with the exciting new launch at Gl. Holtegaard. Yes, I am aware of the irony of writing this on a smartphone while covered in marble dust.

05/06/2026 16:57:25


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