Considered a pioneer of Expanded Cinema, Aldo Tambellini came to prominence in the 1960s with his experimental work in television and cinema. Fascinated by the blurring of boundaries between creative disciplines, he began to fuse film projections with music, dance, painting and spoken word, producing kinetic, sculptural installations.
Television is a means of communication in the larger sense, which should enable us to relate instantaneously to each other. It is the case of an impermanent electronic beam capable of exchanging inter-global communications, a medium which should be explored for its speed of light, its instantaneous quality.
— Aldo Tambellini in an interview with Visual History Project