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Italy
Installation, Metal on Other
Size: 118.1 W x 86.6 H x 0.4 D in
Ships in a Crate
"Shadows-in-the-net" (plastic graffiti made of metal network)
Installation:Metal on Other
Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork
Size:118.1 W x 86.6 H x 0.4 D in
Frame:Not Framed
Ready to Hang:Not applicable
Packaging:Ships in a Crate
Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Handling:Ships in a wooden crate for additional protection of heavy or oversized artworks. Crated works are subject to an $80 care and handling fee. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
Ships From:Italy.
Customs:Shipments from Italy may experience delays due to country's regulations for exporting valuable artworks.
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Mario Martinelli was born in Treviso in 1944. He studied Literature at the University of Padova, where he later completed his PhD. in Contemporary Art. At the same time Mario Martinelli also studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Venice. He's teaching Art History. Martinelli's work as a theorist and as a teacher has always gone hand-in hand with his research as a practising artist. This research has evolved within a very personal theme of inward reflection, beginning in 1969 with his first 'unwoven canvas'. Chequered patterning on a surface, intended as a pure convention, is the unifying and recurring theme of all Martinelli's work, beginning with the 'stessuti' 'unwovens' of the 1970s-1980s to the 'traspareti' which followed, the interplay of light and shadow both on canvass and on the walls of buildings. Since the early 1990s Martinelli's traspareti have taken on the shape of the shadows that live within them, becoming metaphysical 'pirates', real entities which enjoy the ambiguous status of being both objects and, at the same time, doubles of the spirit, it's the shadows-in-the-net. He exhibited at the 1992 Biennale in Lausanne and at the 1995 Venice Biennale expositions. Since then, Mario Martinelli has travelled the world and flashed and blown among the city walls the passer-bys' shadows, thereby emancipating them from the bodies they belonged to and showing them on a screen which disappears little by little. They so become an ephemeral monument of the miraculous inconsistence of men, their get-to-know themselves and their own disappearance (exhibited in Venice, Milan, Paris, Toronto, Montreal, Tokyo...) When covered with the mesh of a net, these shadows, like new plastic graffiti, permanently surface on the city walls, which Martinelli insists on humanizing. Art galleries and public institutions worldwide have taken an interest in Martinelli's art concept and are showing it via exhibitions and catalogues. Art critiques and historians believe this is a touching contribution to the contemporary feeling of lost identity and loneliness as well as a reaction against modern-day cities' indifference to men.
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