“Soft Monument”
Exhibition
	Exhibition
In Soft Monument, artist–designer Jordan Fleming and architect Rosanna Ceravolo meet at the fault line between architecture and the object. Their debut collaboration transforms the language of the built environment into something intimate, luminous, and alive.
Anchored by a new lighting collection, the exhibition reimagines the architectural cornice, that most familiar of interior gestures, as an object of illumination. Cast, moulded, and hand-finished in concrete composite composed of recycled marble aggregate and dust, metal, and glass, each work becomes a meditation on how light and material behave, how scale shifts perception, and how structure can move from the monumental to the delicate with a turn of the hand.
Surrounding these shared works are individual explorations: Fleming’s quiet, materially driven objects that hold presence like breath, and Ceravolo’s architectonic forms that press against the edges of dream and design. Together, their dialogue unfolds through contrasts, fluid and rigid, ephemeral and permanent, utilitarian and poetic, revealing design as a site of encounter between body, space, and idea.
Soft Monument celebrates collaboration as a form of architecture itself: a structure built from trust, intuition, and the shared desire to transform the everyday into something strange, sensual, and newly seen.
	Anchored by a new lighting collection, the exhibition reimagines the architectural cornice, that most familiar of interior gestures, as an object of illumination. Cast, moulded, and hand-finished in concrete composite composed of recycled marble aggregate and dust, metal, and glass, each work becomes a meditation on how light and material behave, how scale shifts perception, and how structure can move from the monumental to the delicate with a turn of the hand.
Surrounding these shared works are individual explorations: Fleming’s quiet, materially driven objects that hold presence like breath, and Ceravolo’s architectonic forms that press against the edges of dream and design. Together, their dialogue unfolds through contrasts, fluid and rigid, ephemeral and permanent, utilitarian and poetic, revealing design as a site of encounter between body, space, and idea.
Soft Monument celebrates collaboration as a form of architecture itself: a structure built from trust, intuition, and the shared desire to transform the everyday into something strange, sensual, and newly seen.
