“Book of Delights” — Marina Aristotel’s Emotional Cartographies
May 29, 2026 | Cosmina Marcela OLTEAN ArtPageAt a time when commercial spaces increasingly attempt to reinvent themselves as cultural meeting points, Marina Aristotel’s recent project Book of Delights, presented at AFI Brașov, emerged as a subtle yet deeply atmospheric artistic intervention. The exhibition introduced audiences to a mature visual language built around the relationship between painting, resin, transparency, and emotional memory.
According to the curatorial text written by independent curator Irina Ungureanu, the series represents “a stage of maturity” in the artist’s evolving practice. The curatorial statement frames the conceptual direction of the project:
“The Book of Delights series marks a stage of maturity in Marina Aristotel’s practice, where painting and resin meet in a coherent and balanced visual language.”
The text further explains how the artist’s recent years of material and formal experimentation — ranging from fragmentation and reassembly to plexiglass interventions and layered constructions — gradually evolved into a calmer and more contemplative visual synthesis.
Ungureanu describes the works as “cartographies of happy spaces,” shaped by memory, emotional fragments, and delicate geometries:
“The works propose a cartography of ‘happy spaces’ — real or imagined — born from luminous memories and moments of joy.”
This idea of emotional mapping is also reflected in the way the compositions are constructed. Often viewed from an aerial perspective, the works resemble imaginary territories, mental landscapes, or abstract urban plans. At the same time, resin — a material that has become central to Aristotel’s artistic vocabulary — introduces depth, translucency, and subtle light refractions.
In another statement displayed within the exhibition, the artist reflects on her understanding of art itself:
“For me, art is a living space of encounter, a place where memory and emotion become visible, and where each viewer can discover their own story.”
This participatory dimension transforms Book of Delights into more than a visual presentation; it becomes an invitation to slow contemplation — a rare pause within a space otherwise dominated by speed, consumption, and commercial imagery.
Published materials related to the project describe the exhibition as a dialogue between two major directions in Marina Aristotel’s practice: painting and resin-based works. The curator refers to “a space of transparencies and doubles,” where the two mediums “observe and complete one another.” (empowerartists.org)
Texts dedicated to the exhibition also emphasize a constant movement between macro and micro scales: some pieces function like aerial surveys of imaginary cities or territories, while others resemble microscopic observations of matter, texture, and light.
Born in Bucharest in 1985, Marina Aristotel graduated from the National University of Arts in Bucharest, Department of Painting. Her practice spans painting, resin, plexiglass, collage, and assemblage. Since 2019, she has increasingly focused on layered sculptural works and translucent structures that explore the relationship between light, transparency, and chromatic fragmentation.
The presentation of the project at AFI Brașov reflects a broader tendency among commercial venues to integrate contemporary art and cultural programming into public urban life.
Yet the strength of Book of Delights lies less in spectacle and more in atmosphere. Rather than overwhelming the viewer, the exhibition constructs a fragile emotional architecture — one rooted in memory, intimacy, and sensory resonance. The result is a visual environment that functions simultaneously as exhibition, mental landscape, and poetic archive: a collection of luminous fragments transformed into surfaces that preserve the traces of lived experience.



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