VIDEO ART – INSTALLATIONS – PHOTOGRAPHY

The Little Mango is a visual artist working across video, installation, and photography.

Her practice explores the silent relationship between humans and technology — where digital devices become both sacred and obsolete.

Deeply influenced by the tradition of video art and the works of artists such as Bill Viola, her research focuses on time, perception, and the dialogue between the natural elements and the artificial object.

Through long, contemplative takes and minimal gestures, she investigates the friction between matter and device, between connection and absence.

Born in Italy, she studied Art Direction and developed a fascination for moving images during her academic years.

She now lives and works between Sardinia and Lombardy.

The Little Mango artist is known for contemporary video art installations and poetic explorations of time, nature, and technology.

About The Little Mango artist

Contemporary video art and installations by The Little Mango

The Little Mango is a visual artist working with video, installation, and photography. Her practice investigates the relationship between the human body, digital devices, and natural elements. Inspired by Bill Viola, she explores how silence, perception, and transformation define the human condition in the digital age.

Based between Sardinia and Lombardy, The Little Mango artist creates minimalist yet visceral works that blend organic materials with contemporary technology. Her projects include the video trilogy Burn, Bury, Sink and other experimental installations.

Discover more about her artistic statement in the Manifesto section.

The Little Mango artist - contemporary video art and installations

The Little Mango artist continues to expand her practice through long-form video experiments and interdisciplinary collaborations. Her interest lies in the slow transformation of materials and the emotional weight of observation. Each project questions how digital tools reshape memory, attention, and intimacy.

Over the years, The Little Mango has developed a personal language of slowness, silence, and repetition. Her works have been presented in both physical and digital spaces, creating a dialogue between presence and absence, inviting viewers to experience time beyond the screen.