For this exhibition, Caló and Queimadela transform the exhibition space into a memory space: an atmospheric volume of intense colour and light that prepares and provides for intimate encounter with the various works on view. As with images in memory theatres, these pieces no longer correspond to extractions of impressions from the sensible world through the senses, but rather belong to the Mundus imaginabilis, from which the images emit magical connections operated by the artists.
At the same time, the body, which discovers this space, does so from the inside of its mind, from its own association with images. While encountering the images, the body can detect what the eyes do not see and that what is hidden in the depths of the human mind. For Camillo and Fludd, the theatre of memory contained this hidden possibility, bringing together the universe and man in all its differences, gestures, movements and words, thus unveiling the countless paths that our mind travels, from the most beautiful and sublime to the most terrifying and tenebrous.