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Jean-Marc Moro, The Tower of Babel, 85 x 70 cm, collage, Indian ink, pigments, sgraffito on mixed coating (plaster and lime), wood, 2016.
I created “The Tower of Babel” inspired, following my illustrious predecessors, by the Old Testament. This painting, measuring 85 x 70 cm, is the result of a mixture of techniques: collage, Indian ink, pigments, and sgraffito on a plaster and lime coating, all mounted on wood. Sgraffito, an Italian fresco technique,… allowed me to bring details and textures to life, scratching the surface to reveal the layers below, symbolizing the revelation of the truth hidden beneath the apparent surface of things. Fruit of excess, symbol of human madness and the evils of idolatry, this tower reminds us of our insatiable quest for greatness and the discord that results from it, plunging humanity into a form of Satanism evoked by Baudelaire.
Jean-Marc Moro is a French artist specializing in sgraffito. Born in 1964, into a working-class family of Italian origin, he worked on construction sites very early on. In 1990, a serious accident led him to a true “crossing the mirror” during which he was spiritually reborn and discovered his artistic vocation. At the École d'Avignon, he trained in decorative arts. Exploring the roots of Christianity and oriental religions, he participates in major creation or restoration projects in France and the United States (Lutetia hotel, Châtelet theater, Vernantes castle, Lake Tahoe chalet). Faithful to the tradition of craftsmanship, inseparable according to him from his spiritual quest, he hopes to become a "warrior of light" by paying homage to the material he works with his favorite technique, sgraffito.