MATHEMATIC VIEW – NEGATIVE

Description

CIREDZ – Mathematic View / Negative

Screen print / Serigrafia, 4 layers
50 x 70 cm,2018
Old Mill paper, 300gr.
Limited edition of 10

In collaboration with 56Fili

Not Available

Artist info

Ciredz

Roberto Ciredz was born in 1981 on the southeast coast of Sardinia, where nature is strong and almost brutal, and which requires one’s full surrender in order not to suffer from its strength. Yellow, green and blue dominates the island, where winds blow violently, molding shapes and mixing tones. The graphic design of forms and chromatic progressions has thus become a constant in the artist’s work. In time, Ciredz felt the need to develop an active relationship with his land, fascinated by its uninhabited spaces, fragments of the desolate landscape where men’s traces tend to disappear, overwhelmed by the ever-persistent nature. Hence his choice to paint small abstract interventions on uninhabited ruins in the countryside, which become “volumes” in the artist’s intimate dialogue with space. As Ciredz says: I love to think that those actions will be seen only by very few people. Crucial to his activity is his move to Bologna, where he attends the Academy of Fine Arts and specializes in Graphic Arts. For the first time, he finds himself in permanent contact with an industrialized city. The regular presence of cement replaces his familiar rural elements, which survive only in hidden parts of the city. For Ciredz mural surfaces become a place for a shared and non-exclusive painting dialogue. The artist now expresses himself in public spaces, creating large-scale sections of nature on concrete sections. With his paintings he creates a symbolic relationship between the aesthetic components of the works and the surroundings in which they are placed; the same applies to his sculptures through his specific choice and combination of materials.

More info

Signed and numbered by the artist.

These screen prints are part of the “Mathematic View” series, that includes prints and drawings.The series was born from the idea of obtaining views of forms inspired by nature, through the use of geometry and mathematics.  By increasing or decreasing the density of parallel lines the artist obtained more or less saturated shades (the more lines there are, the darker the background). The rigidity of the geometry is dampened by the irregular shapes and intentional construction errors, which help to create a dynamic motif.

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