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In order to escape from the labyrinth in which they had been imprisoned, Daedalus made a pair of wings for himself and for his son Icarus. Flying would make them free. In his enthusiasm, after taking flight Icarus got too close to the sun, as a result of which the heat melted the wax that held the feathers on his back and he ended up falling into the sea and drowning. Over the course of history, a liaison has been forged between human beings and the sky; between the desire TO FLY and the physical and symbolic meaning entailed by flying. As a result, flight brings together contrary and complementary elements: the eternal and ascending as opposed to the perishable and descending, the hope and distress in the act of learning to fly and thus rising or plunging to the ground; life and death. Our desire TO FLY responds to our need to move one place to another, although we very often plunge into an abyss, as did Icarus.
Irene Zottola
Ícaro
Ediciones anomalas, 2021
Design by Underbau
22 x 16 cm
108 pages
Hardcover
Spanish, English
ISBN 978-84-09-32157-5