‘The Saturday afternoon of childhood As a child, Filippo sat at the keyboards while his mother washed the church carpets. Saturday afternoons possessed a particular light, lower and golden, capable of stretching shadows along the nave and making the stone appear softer to the eye. The church was empty; only the sound of running water could be heard, the steady movement of working hands, and the scent of freshly laundered fabric spreading through the still-warm air. Seated before the keyboards, the child sensed that the sound of the organ transformed the space. The notes rose slowly and deliberately, passing through the air scented with soap, settling upon the carpets laid out to dry, some hanging over the railings just outside the main door. Sound and fragrance brushed against the columns and returned with a gentler resonance. The church took on a character both domestic and solemn; the vibration of the music mingled with the smell of cleanliness and transformed humble labor into a silent ritual. Through this experience, Filippo learned that material care and the pursuit of beauty belong to the same horizon.’ – Filippo Sorcinelli