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19.7 W x 27.6 H in
Ships in a Tube
This work will ship in a dent-resistant tube. Rolled works can easily be restretched. Read More
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This intaglio fine art print, titled Sindonica I, weaves a narrative that stretches back in time. Originating from a flattened sardine tin found on the roads of the "Mar de Castiglia" (Sea of Castilla) amidst the pine expanse above Segovia (Spain), it found its way into the hands of Fernando Texidor...
2023
Print, Engraving on Other
Limited Edition of 2
19.7 W x 27.6 H x 0.1 D in
No
Not Framed
Certificate is Included
Ships Rolled in a Tube
Shipping is included in price.
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Ships rolled in a tube. 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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Fabio Zanino builds an artistic language from one of the oldest human tensions: the desire to find order inside disorder. His practice begins with the recognition that time moves forward without pause, shaping every object it touches through weather, use, accident, and neglect. Rather than resisting that movement, he gathers its traces and gives them renewed visibility. Surfaces marked by rust, fading, abrasion, and erosion become evidence rather than damage. In his hands, discarded matter is not mute residue but a witness carrying memory. This attention to time places his work within a larger conversation about how societies value objects and how material histories survive after usefulness appears to end. He approaches sculpture as both observation and transformation, allowing viewers to consider what remains hidden in ordinary things. Through this method, he creates works that feel contemporary while also connected to enduring human habits of repair, adaptation, and reinvention. His art suggests that what seems exhausted may still contain fresh visual power and emotional resonance. Central to Zanino’s process is cutting, a gesture he describes as simple yet essential. Through cutting, larger forms are reduced into elemental units, fragments that he treats like “reality pixels.” These pieces may first appear displaced or disconnected, but they are only in transition. Once separated from their original context, they become flexible components that can enter a new structure guided by intuition, balance, and visual rhythm. The result is neither collage nor mere reconstruction. It is a reorganization of lived matter into a different logic. This strategy allows him to preserve traces of the original object while changing its meaning entirely. A rusted panel, worn sign, or broken surface can become part of a refined composition that still remembers its earlier life. Such works ask viewers to look slowly, noticing how damage can become pattern and how fracture can become design. Zanino transforms the familiar by refusing to erase its scars. His fascination with minimal units also reveals a broader philosophical position. Modern life often encourages speed, disposal, and replacement, yet his practice slows perception and rewards close attention. By breaking objects into smaller components, he asks what truly constitutes identity: is an object defined by function, by material, by memory, or by arrangement? The answer shifts within each sculpture.
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