Calander
January: Named after the Roman god of gates Janus, January symbolizes the end of one year and the start of another. Janus, represented by two faces looking towards the past and the future, blurs the difference between endings and beginnings.
February: February was named after the Latin term februum, meaning a ritual purification. In Roman times, purification was significant, and at the end of the month, they celebrated Terminus, the god of boundaries.
March: Named after Mars, the god of war, March once marked the end of winter and the start of nature's revival. The Roman calendar originally had ten months, and the year only lasted 304 days, leading to the addition of January and February to synchronize it with the seasons.
Lamp by Martinelli luce.
In collaboration with Dor Cohen.
2020
January: Named after the Roman god of gates Janus, January symbolizes the end of one year and the start of another. Janus, represented by two faces looking towards the past and the future, blurs the difference between endings and beginnings.
February: February was named after the Latin term februum, meaning a ritual purification. In Roman times, purification was significant, and at the end of the month, they celebrated Terminus, the god of boundaries.
March: Named after Mars, the god of war, March once marked the end of winter and the start of nature's revival. The Roman calendar originally had ten months, and the year only lasted 304 days, leading to the addition of January and February to synchronize it with the seasons.
Lamp by Martinelli luce.
In collaboration with Dor Cohen.
2020


