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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
39.4x39.4in
About this artwork
It depicts two female figures made of acrylic concrete and corten steel, supporting each other in a balancing act where it is deliberately unclear who is giving and who is receiving.
This is where the heart of the work takes shape.
Matter once again becomes body, tension, bond.
The concrete I used to create the two bodies becomes a symbol of resistance and at the same time of vulnerability.
Corten, with its lively oxidation, tells of the passing… and transforming time.
Acrylic shades the material, passes through it, gives it vibration.
"Shared Weight" speaks of authentic solidarity, a space where the weight of existence is not lightened, but shared, and it is precisely in sharing that it transforms and becomes a bond.
The contact between the two bodies reveals the gap necessary for mutual recognition.
The other body becomes a mirror, it inexorably reminds us of ourselves, of our flaws and possibilities. But it also becomes a bridge, a kind of
My life's journey led me to graduate with a degree in pedagogy and find a job in education. I then transformed my passion for art, which I had developed at an early age in my uncle's art studio, from a hobby to a professional pursuit. I have maintained constant contact with self-taught painting, attending advanced courses at the Carrara Academy of Fine Arts in Bergamo and honing my technique in the workshop of master Elio Maffeis.
It's said that art doesn't produce what's visible, but makes visible what isn't always visible. Broad, generous brushstrokes and seemingly random brushstrokes form the backdrop to faces that I try to bring to life on the canvas, as if to bring emotions to life. Each of my works is the result, never planned, of the constant interaction between what I feel inside and what is revealed on the canvas. In an ongoing dialogue, which allows an emotion to grow and evolve, giving it shape and color.