Curated by Succede Studio, with Mariavittoria Giusti and Alessandro Cripsta
Free admission, limited availability
November 26, 2025, 7:30 PM – 9:30 PM
L’Altro, Via Mantova 13, Milan

An evening gathering that transforms a bar into an intimate, creative space where drawing becomes a tool for personal exploration. Mariavittoria Giusti, psychotherapist, will guide a conversation highlighting the psychological significance of line, composition, and the interplay of positive and negative space within an image. Participants are invited to engage in this creative exercise with the help of Alessandro Cripsta, illustrator, experimenting with markers and pencils on paper to explore aspects of the self.
SUCCEDE STUDIO is a creative agency founded by Alessia Amendola Gonzalez, an art director with a Mexican touch, and Martina Ferrin, a producer passionate about swimming and true crime podcasts. The agency, offering full-service art direction and production, aims to spread culture, bring ideas to life, and promote talent. Events organized by Succede Studio are known for connecting and surprising audiences with unexpected and engaging content.
MARIAVITTORIA GIUSTI (Milan, 1966) is a psychologist and psychotherapist, trained at the University of Padua and the Center for Psychology and Transactional Analysis in Milan. She practices psychotherapy with a particular focus on relational processes, and the dynamics of individuals and groups within organizations. Using tools of intuition and authenticity in self-development, she promotes collaborative work with clients to explore emotions, experiences, and internal resources.
ALESSANDRO CRIPSTA (Como, 1990) is an illustrator and graphic artist. After earning a degree in Graphic Design and Art Direction, he moved to London to specialize in illustration. Returning to Milan, he collaborated with the multidisciplinary collective Turbosafary. His work intertwines suspended, dreamlike images that engage with the collective unconscious. Inspired by hidden symbolism in everyday life and metaphysical compositions, he develops visual universes where long shadows and silences take shape.