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View In My Room
Painting, Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 47.2 W x 35 H x 0.7 D in
Ships in a Tube
23 Views
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Showed at the The Other Art Fair
Artist featured in a collection
This painting is the central part of a composition of five canvases after " The Forest Fire " by Piero di Cosimo (1505), who painted the fear of wild and domestic animals during a forest fire. His composition is built on the symbol of infinity (the horizontal eight) and some beasts have human faces. This homage to Di Cosimo's artwork represents fire as the breakdown of a balance. From right panel to center a real fire is threatening environment, fauna, and humans and seems untreated and denied. From left to center a symbolic fire has started against our culture. The superimposition of the myth of Actaeon and Artemis makes the fire not only a climate alarm, for which we must join forces, but also an allegory of a metaphysical danger for our culture: if we look at abstractions as if they were real, we burn the world of ideas, the space to imagine an unexpected dialogue, to grow a new bond, to organize an agreement, to re-hypothesize a lost harmony... and our needs crush us to the point of turning us into frightened animals, like Actaeon who wanted to look at the divinity (Artemis) in an earthly way. If the metaphysical becomes physical, the human becomes inhuman, so much so that Actaeon does not realize that he has been transformed into a deer until he is attacked by his own affectionate dogs, who do not recognize him.
2024
Acrylic on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
47.2 W x 35 H x 0.7 D in
5
Not Framed
No
Ships Rolled in a Tube
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Italy.
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I plan to paint in some kind of traditional Italian way, but I often end up doing other things. Collage results in a way to postpone the question “about me” and to receive help from the outside, from a patch, from a piece, like a letter to someone, a phrase out of a casual conversation... I like being in the middle of something created for other reasons, letting it change the priorities of my thoughts; to begin without the labor of birth, just the chaos of living, all in a sudden; to be a free witness of the living, of the absence of the void. I remember a blue sky one evening, so bold, so brimful. It overturned every perception of where I was, if in the full or in the need; both sides, both the cityscape and the sky were filled and willing to be the subject, they pushed on the border. Drawing and painting from life, I experience a similar confusion, lights and colors pulsate in accumulation nodes and vectors, contaminating each other, intercepting figures, not only as shaded signs and smears, but ambitions of a form and of the space around them, that add up in a huge amount of unstable data. So, I wonder if seeing means choosing, protecting oneself from reality, from the harshness of density, from those encounters of divergent wills, and inventing simplified forms as a maternal language. Many artists and people have influenced me, but I would like to remember here the work of Georges Rousse and Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Rousse for having affirmed an organized bidimensional shape out of chaos, as a sum of interventions and paint on ruins, spread three-dimensionally in abandoned architectures, physical memories of places that have lost their function. A simple geometric form appears from a single point of view. I think he explored the opposite direction of fragmentation and of relativism. Gonzalez-Torres for having imagined a way for sculptures, similar to variable installations, that does not need a rigid and fixed form, but could be flexible and repositionable as an electrical cord of light bulbs; or inconsistent yet defined as an accumulation of candies, which could be move away in pieces, maintaining the imprinting of the pile, the pyramidal iconography of a holy motherhood, and could be eaten like a host, to share the holiness or the decay of a body, condensed by time, evoking an original innocence and health.
Handpicked to show at The Other Art Fair presented by Saatchi Art in Dallas
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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