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Painting, Acrylic on Wood
Size: 30 W x 40.1 H x 2 D cm
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"The Girl of Fibonacci"is part of "Black Portrait II", a series of 5 portraits inspired by the problems investigated by that current of thought known as "Posthumanism". In particular, I was interested in broadening the concept of the human to include technological and natural elements previously co...
2020
Painting, Acrylic on Wood
One-of-a-kind Artwork
30 W x 40.1 H x 2 D cm
Yes
Not Framed
Certificate is Included
Ships in a Box
No
Shipping is included in price.
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Germany.
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My artistic research centers on the opposition between being and non-being. In particular, I identidy the head – one of my favored subjects – as the site of an irreconcilable conflict between two ways of perceiving the world: as either existent or non-existent. In my work, the skin of the face becomes a veil to tear away, a surface to excavate and corrode, in order to reveal the nothingness that lies beneath. Or it turns into a shapeless yet organic tissue, entirely detached from the identity of the subject depicted, and yet mysteriously connected to its physiognomy. In my paintings and sculptures the skin of the artwork takes on a central role – not out of a deliberate superficiality, but due to the existential impossibility of knowing the world beyond its surface. Or rather: because the only possible knowledge of the world is that of its appearance. Thus, the epidermis of his sculptures reveals new identities, totally distant from the supposed essence of the object. I transform the plastic materials I employ, from one work to another, into stone, fossil, or metal – leaving the viewer suspended between their expectations of an assumed, original nature of the object and their own active participation in its representation. Through these metamorphoses, a notion of time also takes shape: plastic – a material associated with ecological disasters of global scale, and thus with the end of the world – becomes archaic, even prehistoric, capable of connecting the beginning and the end of time in a cycle that denies its linear and evolutionary perception. This “temporal compression” is also at the root of my painting practice. I often reference works from centuries past, on which critical judgment has long since solidified. By copying dead individuals, painted by long-dead artists, I lead the viewer into a time that simultaneously encompasses both the birth and the end of the artwork. I then intervene on these faces in a brutal and meticulous manner, generating a sense of estrangement, a perceptual rupture that is, in truth, a refusal of the diachronic accumulation of interpretations about the essence of the work: it is a return to the present moment of the perception of the phenomenon. In the end, it’s only a matter of skin.
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