People's Fresco Portraits To explore the artist's work click on an image below. |
by Fabrizio Ruggiero | |
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Ginny |
Idanna |
Neil |
I assumed the language of fresco painting as a system, where the meaning of a work depends on the organization of its concepts and its rules. | ||
Through the invention and use of syntax the work acquires its character of oneness and it is within such a system that verification procedures can be carried out on the meaning of the work itself. Fixing the meaning of the works in the paradigms of the invented pictorial language, the data of the optical perception is read and interpreted as an order of logical relations, of a grammar of seeing. | ||
The structure and process of fresco painting are basic tools in my work that I developed using the most modern technology. My search spread in various directions, always having the art of fresco painting as their source. One of these directions is close-up portraits, even though I prefer the word effigy to portrait, asit conveys in a better way the idea of a symbolic image rather than a realistic one. | ||
Basically I have developed my fresco painting in different ways where the technique and the construction practices become appropriate procedures for the artwork. |
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Sometimes a series of hand sketches will precede a photographic session. Other times I use pictures taken from the media that I use as Ready-made Rectified; that which, in the terminology of Duchamp, is obtained when the author corrects a Readymade. I post-work the images by computer graphic programs and put them together with the hand drawings, resulting in several sketches, out of which will be chosen the one for the fresco painting. |
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Transferring a portrait onto a large format means that the subject is never seen in its totality; the portrait is produced by working on small pieces without seeing the whole image. Difficulties of this kind are crucial to define the nature of the image that will be built up through a process. Renaissance fresco painters solved this problem through the cartoni and spolvero technique (cartoon and pouncing). The cartoon technique is a procedural one because it gives priority to the process and defines the steps of the work before doing them. Transferring an image on cartoons is a rigorous and limiting process. The constructive process prevails on the subject that, to some extent, becomes anonymous, in spite of the fact that it has a name. The subject assumes a secondary role in respect to the method of constructing the image and the division of the face into single parts and their subsequent resetting together, in order to restore the whole, does not produce a loss of description; the portrayed person is always recognizable. |
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Marking distinctions between observed phenomena, identifying relational schemes and drawing their maps are characteristics of the human mind. Since the most ancient of times, the continuous and unstoppable activity of the human mind has been to introduce distinctions in the phenomena that we observe, characterized by a sensibility to the differences, in particular to the difference that produces a difference, which we call information, and consists in characterizing patterns of relationships and constructing their relative maps. If the construction of maps is inborn in the nature of the mental processes of the human being, the mental processes, to be able to manifest themselves, need to be structured in matter and this helps us to relate the measure of man to that of the known universe. |
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From this point of view, I like to look at a human face as a territory and painting as a process to draw a map of that territory, having it clear in my mind that the map is not the territory, the description is not the described, and the name is not the thing named. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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A Bruit secret & Pandora’s Box
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Structure and Form - Analytical Fresco Paintings- |
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