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1
View In My Room
Painting, Wax on Wood
Size: 32.3 W x 47.2 H x 5.1 D in
Ships in a Crate
87 Views
1
Artist featured in a collection
This large field of red wax is marked by multiple gestural interventions of blue wax, whose drippings evoke an action painting where the color thrown on the surface spread on the ground becomes a trace and documentation of the gestures themselves and of the pictorial ritual. This informal and gestural abstract painting is framed by an old window, the shutters of which create a geometric grid that visually overlaps the pictorial surface, originating a curious geometrization of a non-geometric abstraction. Thus a particular visual short-circuit is established between two opposite and apparently contrasting elements: the warm and gestural abstraction of informal painting and the rigorous and geometric abstraction of the window-frame that divides in four stiff and inflexible rectangles the underlying pictorial surface. Finally, the window imposes a dimension of verticality on the painting, which thus abandons the original horizontality that generated it.
Wax on Wood
One-of-a-kind Artwork
32.3 W x 47.2 H x 5.1 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships in a Crate
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a wooden crate for additional protection of heavy or oversized artworks. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
Italy.
Shipments from Italy may experience delays due to country's regulations for exporting valuable artworks.
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Claudio Marziali is an Italian artist living in Bergamo; he senses a strong connection with the wood element, which he has always worked with , also as a specialist restorer. When still an adolescent child, he becomes passionate about art, and turns to analogue photography. His style includes naturalistic and experimental images with a strong intimate quality. Later, he turns to painting and sculpture, which will become his favourite expressive medium. Influenced by the East and by the works of architects such as Nakashima and artists like Kenjirō Azuma – as well as Louise Nevelson – he creates his last collection of wooden sculptures “Recuperi”, in which the strong connection between the artist and the natural world is obvious. Marziali opposes the adulteration and distortion of wood, opting instead for spontaneous manipulations of the shapes, and preferring gold as the best tool to highlight the areas which are most damaged and corroded by time. In accordance with the zen philosophy of kintsugi, where beauty in an object is enhanced by its breaking, and with the way of seeing things, also Japanese, of wabi-sabi – which welcomes and enhances the imperfections of time – Marziali has created works which are defined precisely by the free interpretation of the observer, who an independent ‘user’ who relies, in his readings, purely on his senses and his personal history. Each piece does not tell its story, but reveals the story of the one who is observing. “I believe that we Westerners are inclined by culture to try to dominate and tame nature and to rationally explain things. Thus, we see things as if they were rivers forced into cemented margins. I love to accept nature as it is: I take the beam or log and I wash it, I consolidate it and brush it almost with a kind of reverence, since nature and time have already done their patient work. Then I add only some color and gold to highlight their scars, which are the same as those of Man.” Claudio Marziali.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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