When pressed for details, she smiles again. That same quiet, knowing smile. "You'll hear it when it's ready." Standing in her warehouse at dusk, as the light slants through grime-streaked windows and Zero the cat naps on a pile of deconstructed radios, Giulia M. looks less like an artist and more like a watchmaker. She is hunched over a circuit board, attaching a wire no thicker than a hair. The room hums—not loudly, but present. A low G.
The fashion world anointed her. Vogue called her "the poet of decay." Offers arrived daily: a perfume bottle shaped like a fossil, a jewelry line made of melted circuit boards.
And perhaps that is Giulia M.'s true medium: not metal, not sound, not memory. Just attention. Radical, patient, unsentimental attention. In a world that screams for your focus, she offers a whisper. And if you lean in close enough—you will finally hear what you've been missing. giulia m
"I'm not nostalgic," she insists. "Nostalgia is lazy. I'm interested in grief for futures that never arrived . That's different."
Her materials read like a crime scene inventory: melted vinyl records from a flooded Naples archive, glass shards from a 1980s nightclub mirror, rainwater collected from the rooftops of five different psychiatric hospitals. Nothing is arbitrary. Every inclusion is a citation. In 2022, Gucci came calling. Alessandro Michele, then creative director, asked her to design the sound environment for a runway show in a deconsecrated church. She agreed—but only if she could also build the floor. The result was a catwalk of compressed ash from a burned forest in Calabria, embedded with contact microphones. As models walked, the floor emitted a dry, granular crackle. When pressed for details, she smiles again
That period became her unspoken graduate school. "The lab taught me rhythm," she says. "The brain has frequencies. So does a room. So does a broken chair." In 2019, a small gallery in the Brera district agreed to host a solo show for an unknown artist named "Giulia M." The installation was simple: a single room, darkened. In the center, a series of suspended copper plates, each salvaged from a different decommissioned hospital. Around them, electromagnetic field listeners—repurposed from her lab days—emitted low, shifting tones.
She has a point. Her newer works, including a 2024 piece called Joy as a Contact Force , is built from carnival ride scrap and children's playground bells. It emits erratic, laughing tones. Visitors have reported dancing. Off the record, Giulia M. is not the ascetic her public persona suggests. She cooks elaborate pasta meals for friends. She has a collection of ugly ceramic frogs. She cries during The Muppet Christmas Carol . She is also, quietly, a fierce advocate for arts education in Italian public schools, having anonymously funded six after-school sculpture labs in the past three years. looks less like an artist and more like a watchmaker
All twelve pieces sold within a week. Collectors included a Parisian fashion house and a private curator for the Venice Biennale. Giulia M. did not celebrate. She bought a warehouse in the Lambrate district and disappeared again. Giulia rejects the term "mixed media." She prefers psycho-materialism : the belief that materials carry emotional and historical frequencies, and that the artist's job is to activate them without distortion.
After a restless stint at the Brera Academy, where she abandoned painting for found-object installation, Giulia vanished from the art school circuit. For three years, she worked as a night janitor in a neuroscience lab. By day, she slept. By night, she watched EEG readouts and collected discarded lab equipment: PET scan films, broken oscilloscopes, vials of saline.
When asked why she keeps her philanthropy anonymous, she shrugs. "Fame is a material, too. It has a frequency. I don't want to corrupt the signal."