
MASSIMODECARLO in collaboration with Fondation Le Corbusier are pleased to present Second by Second, Diane Dal-Pra’s debut exhibition at Maison La Roche in Paris.
“Fire: that which cannot be extinguished in this ash...”
__In Génie du non-lieu (2001), the art historian and philosopher Georges Didi-Huberman returns to an idea first articulated by Jacques Derrida: that the image is a living ash. Not a record of what was, not a simple remnant, but the trace of something that has passed through and left its mark - holding absence and presence at once, persisting in the way fire persists in ash: invisible, latent, refusing to be fully extinguished. It is this condition - survival without conclusion, presence without declaration - that Diane Dal-Pra makes her subject in Second by Second.
Dal-Pra’s works burn at a low, persistent heat. These large oils on linen are built slowly, each layer adding to the last until something emerges that could not have been planned or rushed. Dal-Pra paints from memory rather than observation - drawn to the way time distorts what it touches: how recollection bends a shape, bleaches a colour, makes a room feel larger than it ever was. These paintings do not try to show the world as it is. They show what remains of it.
And what they hold is extraordinarily intimate. In Liminal Hours, translucent green planes dissolve into one another, a draped form and its shadow trading places until neither feels more real than the other. In Pressed Against Memories, a chestnut braid runs down the canvas like a fault line, dividing the surface into three distinct worlds - beige upholstery, purple silk, rippling blue textile - each rendered with the precision of a still life, each quietly estranged from the others. Hair becomes landscape. Fabric becomes terrain. The body is present everywhere and nowhere, absorbed into the material world it once moved through. In Second by Second - the title work - a deep red surface fractures outward from a luminous centre, lines spreading like the map of something that has just cracked open or is slowly becoming whole.
There are moments, Dal-Pra writes, that do not arrive all at once - that unfold second by second, as though time itself hesitates to choose a form. Reality scatters, fractures, reveals intervals where something undefined begins to circulate. A life shifts in layers, each one pressing down on the last until something new has formed without anyone quite having noticed. It is inside these intervals that Dal-Pra works - and the title of this exhibition is born. For her, objects are never incidental to this: they absorb what passes through them, outlasting the moments that charged them, becoming witnesses to a life in motion. The braided hair, the folded silk, the fractured red ground - they carry what has passed through them. They hold it quietly, the way ash holds fire.
The process also speaks to a correlation between transience and profound presence. While not produced “in the field”, the works are painted with dynamic movement that delineates a psychic, affective space, and one that retains the energy of encounter. She aims to transmit elusive feelings, fleeting and transient moments, a universally common but impossible to describe sense of egoless connection to the natural world, and a sense of empathy for other forms of life.
Maison La Roche - designed by Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret between 1923 and 1925 - was built from the beginning as a space for living with art. It is here that Dal-Pra’s paintings find their latest home - surfaces that accumulate rather than declare, that hold their meaning in layers, that reveal themselves slowly and on their own terms. The ash, as we have come to understand it, is never cold.
Courtesy MASSIMODECARLO.















Diane Dal-Pra was born in 1991 in Périgueux. She lives and works in Paris.



MASSIMODECARLO gallery was founded in 1987. It switfly stood out on the international artistic scene for its bold, counter-current choices: the gallery focused on lesser-known artists in Italy such as John Armleder, Olivier Mosset, Steven Parrino and Carsten Höller. In the following years, the gallery program expanded to include prominent young artists of the time such as Alighiero Boetti, Cady Noland, Rudolf Stingel, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres.
Maison La Roche, Paris
10 Sq. du Dr Blanche, 75016 Paris, France

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