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The silkscreens in this set are made from oil pastels on paper that I've made in London, inspired by what I saw around me. This one in particular is a person sitting outside the Spence Bakery in Stoke Newington
The silkscreens in this set are made from oil pastels on paper that I've made in London, inspired by what I saw around me. This one in particular is a person sitting outside the Spence Bakery in Stoke Newington
The silkscreens in this set are made from oil pastels on paper that I've made in London, inspired by what I saw around me. This one in particular is a person sitting outside the Clissold park cafè
The silkscreens in this set are made from oil pastels on paper that I've made in London, inspired by what I saw around me. This one in particular is a person sitting outside the Spence Bakery in Stoke Newington
The silkscreens in this set are made from oil pastels on paper that I've made in London, inspired by what I saw around me. This one in particular is Ian, my flatmate at the time, ironing his shirts on a Sunday morning
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Vita stereoscopica Print - Limited Edition of 10

Mary Cinque

Italy

Printmaking, Screenprinting on Paper

Size: 12.6 W x 16.5 H x 0.2 D in

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$500USD

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link - Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Showed at the The Other Art Fair

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About The Artwork

This set includes an English translation of the original texts by Luca Starita. “Vita stereoscopica ” is a set of five screenprints and one aquatint by me, with text in Italian by Luca Starita, the 10th issue of the “Sulphurèi” series curated by Vittorio Avella and Antonio Sgambati's Il laboratorio/le edizioni. Luca Starita and me met in London in 2019. London for me represented the discovery of a new technique, the oil pastel, which she used to explore further a recurring theme in her artistic practice, one that, in the English city, became predominant: the observation of human beings. In 2019 Starita had just published his first novel “La tesi dell'ippocampo". When, a few months after this first meeting, Vittorio Avella co-founder of "Il laboratorio", during a visit to London, proposed to me to create a set of silkscreens accompanied by texts, I immediately thought of asking Starita to write something, in the aim to start a dialogue with an artist who, of Campanian origins like her, has been living for long away from the region. What at first was supposed to be a work on the relationship with the city, be it London or Naples, is transformed over time into a project about people and identities, a topic very dear to Starita and that in those months it is taking shape in what will eventually be his second book: "Canone ambiguo". In the case of my artistic research, this is perhaps the first instance in which the focus on gender identity is so explicit, and it isn't by chance that this happened while I was living in London, a city of freedom and self expression, where many go to be their real selves. The result of these shared reflections and these exchanges between artists of two different disciplines is the set "Vita stereoscopica" (from the title given to the set of texts by Luca Starita), where silkscreens inspired by people seen by me in everyday life, alongside Starita lyrics.

Details & Dimensions

Multi-paneled Printmaking:Screenprinting on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:10

Size:12.6 W x 16.5 H x 0.2 D in

Number of Panels:5

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

"Mary Cinque is an Italian painter, graphic designer and blogger working and living in the Amalfi Coast. Her works – joyful, bright, colourful painting and drawings – are inspired by this place, as well as her heritage, background and travels. Mary spent her childhood between Italy and Ethiopia. Before moving back to the Amalfi Coast in 2019, she has lived in Naples and Milan, where she attended academies of fine art; and Philadelphia, New York and London where she improved her artistic skills and style. Alongside making art, she works as an illustrator and graphic designer, collaborating with selected brands, working on artistic commissions such as illustrations, labels and showroom design. Cinque’s art develops themes connected with what makes us essentially humans: our habitat – the buildings, the streets, the cities – our bodies, what we eat and how we socialise. Art, in Mary’s paintings, becomes a powerful instrument of philosophical investigation which reveals who we really are by questioning our habits, observing those characteristic traits we share as a species, often without realising it. The artist looks at human beings from a different perspective, making interesting and significant what can seem normal or banal to us in our everyday life: the buildings that populate our cities, the streets we walk, people sitting across our table at a café, strangers on the bus. In this nutshell interview by Giulia Corti, Mary Cinque explores some of the most relevant aspects of her art and reflects on how it offers an intriguing and informative perspective about the way we live as human animals. Mary, your art is colourful and vivid, it mixes human and urban subjects by making use of various techniques (oil painting; pastel drawing, markers, “digital” drawing, print-making etc.) and materials (canvasses, magazine pages, an I-pad screen). How do you choose the means with which to develop an artwork and how do the different materials and techniques influence what you want to convey, if they do? Different subjects call for different techniques. Buildings and urbanscape are always acrylic on canvas, while I prefer to depict people using a quicker, immediate approach, like the one that I can get with markers and oil pastels or digital painting. By looking at the main themes of your art, it is possible to notice what seems to be a tension. On one hand, you portrayed the stillness and artificiality of urban landscapes and buildings (e.g.

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Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Handpicked to show at The Other Art Fair presented by Saatchi Art in Los Angeles, London

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