03.04.2026 15:00 - 18:00
CONSARC/GALLERIA, Via F.Borromini 2, 6830 Chiasso
For more than 35 years, CONSARC/GALLERY has been a benchmark for fine art photography.
It is with this spirit that, in recent years, we have embarked on a path of natural evolution toward integrating the language of photography into the broader and more vibrant dialogue of contemporary art.
A path that has led us to also invite artists from other disciplines - painters, graphic designers, performers and film-makers - who choose photography not as an end, but as a means, as a trace, as a concept. We wanted to explore what happens when the gaze of a "not just photographer" meets photographic technique, shifting boundaries and enriching our vision.
It is exactly in this groove of research that 15 Degrees of Inaccuracy, William Fernando Aparicio Camacho's first solo exhibition in Switzerland, scheduled from March 8 to April 26, 2026, fits.
William Aparicio, a Colombian-born, academically trained artist who has been living and working in Milan for the past few years, does not use photography to tell a story, but integrates it into a more complex expressive universe that includes installations and video. His goal-as anticipated-is to create a trace and question the very nature of time, the pivotal theme of his research and a concept as elusive as it is universal.
The works in the exhibition are not simply snapshots, but environments and visual constructs to be explored. In the installations, space becomes an integral part of the work, enveloping the viewer; in the videos, time is no longer a frozen instant, but becomes duration, flux, repetition. Photographs, objects and projections are the basic elements of what we might call metaphors of time, where the fourth dimension is captured, layered, blocked or, on the contrary, dilated.
With15 Degrees of Inaccuracy, CONSARC/GALLERIA continues in the task it has set itself of promoting photography not as an island, but as an archipelago connected to all the other arts, in the knowledge that an artist's gaze, regardless of its primary medium, can reveal unexpected truths.
Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.
A path that has led us to also invite artists from other disciplines - painters, graphic designers, performers and film-makers - who choose photography not as an end, but as a means, as a trace, as a concept. We wanted to explore what happens when the gaze of a "not just photographer" meets photographic technique, shifting boundaries and enriching our vision.
It is exactly in this groove of research that 15 Degrees of Inaccuracy, William Fernando Aparicio Camacho's first solo exhibition in Switzerland, scheduled from March 8 to April 26, 2026, fits.
William Aparicio, a Colombian-born, academically trained artist who has been living and working in Milan for the past few years, does not use photography to tell a story, but integrates it into a more complex expressive universe that includes installations and video. His goal-as anticipated-is to create a trace and question the very nature of time, the pivotal theme of his research and a concept as elusive as it is universal.
The works in the exhibition are not simply snapshots, but environments and visual constructs to be explored. In the installations, space becomes an integral part of the work, enveloping the viewer; in the videos, time is no longer a frozen instant, but becomes duration, flux, repetition. Photographs, objects and projections are the basic elements of what we might call metaphors of time, where the fourth dimension is captured, layered, blocked or, on the contrary, dilated.
With15 Degrees of Inaccuracy, CONSARC/GALLERIA continues in the task it has set itself of promoting photography not as an island, but as an archipelago connected to all the other arts, in the knowledge that an artist's gaze, regardless of its primary medium, can reveal unexpected truths.
Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.
Opening hours
SA by appointmentClosed DO, LU, MA and Holidays