Antropolis
If the city, by definition, is a human institution, the term Antropolis (literally "city of man") may seem prolix and redundant.
To fully understand its meaning, it's illuminating to observe that the human figure, within these works, never appears.
This absence leads us to conceive the idea of a city inhabited by robots, a city of "flying architecture" that represents a world of its own.
Ragnisco deliberately keeps silent about the origin of this world, leaving us the task of deciphering a place out of time, a universe of flying basilicas and robots, whose memory paradoxically belonging to the future, reactivating the creative capacity, becomes essential for the rebirth of man.