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Giulia Gray – Evolution through small things

Evolution throught small things, started after years in the fashion industry.Therefore Giulia Gray shifted her focus to art, delving into the human experience through her work. Her art is a blend of instinct and contemplation, where emotions and study intertwine with impulses and reason.

Giulia, tell us about yourself.

I’ve always been painting and taking photographs, ever since I was a child, painting with oil on canvas.

Growing up, my two passions were art and fashion. Opting to study and work in fashion allowed me to keep art in a more ‘untouched’ realm. After attending fashion school in Florence and Polimoda, I joined La Perla in Bologna as a stylist. For twenty years, I pursued a successful career in design until I rediscovered my love for painting. In 2021, I made the leap to fully dedicate myself to art, and it’s been rewarding. Despite being new to this field, I’ve had positive responses: selling pieces, engaging with critics and galleries. It’s a new journey, but I feel I’m on the right path.

How do you create your art?

It depends. Among the artworks I proposed to Cinquerosso Arte, there are, for example, some studies featuring my cat, Spuma. When I started painting again, I wanted to develop new techniques using different materials: I mix ink and watercolor, use salt and other products to achieve particular reactions. Spuma is a muse that I always have around, since I paint at home, in my studio. His portraits essentially come from the opportunity to have a subject always available for poses. Furthermore, he is very suitable for what I want to do, also thanks to his colors.

In other artworks, some have an abstract essence.

Yes, all of a sudden after the initial period, I started doing a completely different type of work. Something much more introspective about personal growth and the general evolution of human beings. It’s quite a challenging research, which indeed leans towards abstraction. Furthermore, I don’t work olny as a painter, because I’m also interested in photography and video art, but the theme remains the same: exploring the everyday, understanding how human evolution stems from the simplest things, the smallest ones. I focus a lot on the context of home and intimacy, everything that is very intimate and daily, which we usually don’t observe because it seems mundane. Like a cat, precisely.

How much of your work is rational and how much is instinctive?

Basically, my painting is a spontaneous, instinctive expression that stems from personal work, meditation, and therapy. It reflects my experiences, emotions, and the broader spectrum of human existence. However, I aim for it to be relatable and open to interpretation, allowing each viewer to make it their own. The works are designed to be modular and customizable, creating something unique and evolving.

How are you finding Cinquerosso Arte?

Great. It seems like a very professional organization, and everyone is very friendly. It’s an exciting project that I feel enthusiastic about. I hope it continues, and for now, the impressions are very positive.

Read the article on Owen Gent!

paesaggo opere donna verde

Owen Gent- I love seeing my works come to life in new ways

Owen Gent:”I love seeing my works come to life in new ways”. He is an Illustrator for publishing and communication, and he impresses with his ability to condense complex stories and concepts into an image of rare poetry.

Owen, tell us your story. How did you get into art?

I’ve always drawn and painted. I don’t remember when I started, but my career formally began when I started studying illustration at Falmouth University in England. It was there that I truly began to develop my personal voice as a painter and illustrator, creating the first works that felt truly mine.

After graduating, I started painting signs, painting boats, and doing other odd jobs. After that, I found soon my way as an illustrator for publishing and advertising. At this time ,I also work on personal projects.

What inspires you?

I experiment and draw inspiration from many things; I also always look beyond the world of visual art. As a musician, I owe a lot to folk music and folk tales. Nature is also a great inspiration for me, especially when I travel to hike and swim in wonderful places.

What techniques do you prefer?

I use a combination of traditional and digital techniques. I start with pencils and watercolors, then scan the painting to manipulate the color, composition, and texture using Photoshop. Many of my textures are things I’ve found or created by hand, then transferred digitally. I have a huge library of textures, including pieces of wood, aged paper, used etching plates, and even organic materials like leaves, which I then turn into paintings.

What do you think of Cinquerosso Arte?

I believe it’s a great opportunity for my work to reach a new audience! I enjoy seeing what happens when one of my pieces is placed in a new context, as it gives them room to breathe and becomes part of their story.

Read the article on Sebastiano Sallemi!

In Search of the Essential

Sebastiano Sallemi – In Search of the Essential

As a Visual Arts teacher and artist, he is in search of the essential. Sebastiano Sallemi explores the through forms, colors, lights, and sounds. His artistic journey guided him towards embracing analytical painting, navigating through experiments and gradually simplifying his approach.

Tell us about your artistic journey.

Firstly, I started to approach painting during my time at the art institute, and I loved it right away, thanks in part to excellent teachers who introduced me to this expressive form. I continued tirelessly drawing and painting, deepening my knowledge of various materials. At the academy, I began using wood, special boards, paints, and so on. After three years of studying restoration, I specialized in sculpture, and today I am a teacher of Visual Arts. However, my relationship with painting has never ceased. It has been a journey that has gone through different phases. Initially, within the realm of sculpture, I drew inspiration from great artists like Louise Nevelson, known for her use of recycled materials. Then, gradually, I shifted towards painting, particularly analytical painting.

What is it about?

Analytical painting, emerging in Italy in the 1960s, centers on material exploration and leans towards an extreme simplification of forms. This journey led me to incorporate wood, traditionally a sculptural material, into my pictorial context. Through a sequence of experiments, I evolved gradually into my current body of work. The paramount element for me is color, with a tendency towards an extreme simplification of forms, mainly manifested in geometric shapes within my paintings.

Can you describe your creative process for us?

My creative process begins with observation, particularly observing nature, coupled with visual memories from years spent traveling around Italy. To these memories, these landscapes, I associate the colors of my homeland (I was born in Sicily). At a certain point, I started to connect colors, shapes, and sounds, creating a series of works titled ‘White Noises,’ referring to sounds that induce relaxation. In these pieces, I thought to use color for the same purpose. I enjoy the idea that my paintings provide viewers with a sense of peace.

Are you working on any particular projects at the moment?

Yes, today I am working on surfaces painted with very delicate colors, reminiscent of cracked, ancient walls. I particularly like this project because it allows me to weave a narrative around light and sound, adding the dimension of time. The concept of creating surfaces that evoke a sense of age, I fundamentally associate with everything created by and passed down by humanity.

How is your experience with Cinquerosso Arte?

I discovered the website through social media, and I must say I was particularly impressed by the possibility of reproducing paintings through high-quality printing. I find it to be a fascinating idea because, among other things, it allows emerging artists to work and make themselves known. Additionally, the staff at Cinquerosso Arte is truly very serious and professional.

Read the article on Mattia Perru!

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Mattia Perru – Between the known and the unknown

The artworks of Mattia Perru delve deep into the viewer’s mind, triggering emotions and thoughts that skim the surface of the unconscious. Meanwhile, the artist seeks the path towards extreme synthesis.

Mattia, what is art for you?

I have always approached art casually, without making it a life project. I am a mechanical engineer and work in a manufacturing company; something quite distant from painting. However, I come from a family where there was still an interest in visual art, particularly from my father. Let’s say that, up until a year ago, painting was a relaxing activity for me in my spare time. For the past year, I’ve decided to do it consistently, and I would like it to become a more structured activity.

Your works are quite deep. Is there a lot of thought behind them?

Yes, almost always there is a pre-existing planning. Before starting to paint, I immagine the scenario I want to represent. Perhaps I don’t have the subject already clear, but at least I know the atmosphere I want to create. That’s where I start. Sometimes, if I can’t immediately get to work, I take notes. Generally, in my works, there are environments and figures that are quite recognizable, but I would like to gradually move towards greater abstraction. I don’t yet have the gift of extreme synthesis, so I can’t feel comfortable in an abstract context, but I aspire to that. When I try, I find myself ending up in mannerism, and I would like to avoid that. Synthesis is not simple because it is much easier to add than to remove.

In any case, your works are quite powerful. They remind me of the masterpieces of surrealism.

First of all, thank you. Indeed, I love Magritte a lot, and in general, I appreciate the intimacy of certain atmospheres. As I mentioned, in my artworks, there are recognizable figures because I enjoy the realism of detail, but I’m not interested in the realism of the situation, in the pure and simple reproduction of reality. I’m interested in the realistically detailed decontextualized. I like creating atmospheres that reconcile introspection. I tend, for example, towards dark tones, and it comes instinctively to me to create artworks with twilight and nighttime settings. Perhaps because those are the hours when there is more tranquility, when interferences diminish, and it’s easier to think.

What would you like people to feel when they stand in front of one of your works?

I would like them to experience a sense of familiarity and, at the same time, estrangement. I want them to see something that feels like they know but can’t fully understand, like when trying to recall a dream. I sometimes come across works where there isn’t a specific detail that strikes me, there isn’t a more or less interesting situation, but there is a sense of disorientation: it feels like recognizing something familiar that I have forgotten. I really like that feeling, and I would like people to experience it in front of my works. I want them to feel touched in the unconscious.

How do you find working with Cinquerosso Arte?

I like it because everything is managed in a very professional and well-crafted manner, including the presentations on the website. Unfortunately, I couldn’t attend the anniversary reunion because I was abroad, but I hope there will be other opportunities.

Discover our B2B service!

hospitality fiera riva dl garda

Cinquerosso Arte at Hospitality – Pad C2 – Stand C04

This is a significant event for Cinquerosso Arte,that will exibit with its own stand: from February 5th to 8th, 2024. At Hospitality – The Hospitality Fair, to promote the artworks of its emerging artists at this historic B2B exhibition. It’s dedicated to hospitality industry hotels, restaurants, bars and food. The event is held annually in Riva del Garda.

Cinquerosso Arte is the first art gallery dedicated to interior design, a platform created to bring art to hotels, restaurants, bars, and accommodations through collaboration with interior professionals. Cinquerosso Arte is affiliated with AIPI (Italian Association of Professional Interior Designers), it’s mission is to support the selection of artworks for the Horeca sector during the design phase.

Following the success of the participation in SIA in Rimini, where it had an honorable placement with the installation of 12 artworks in the Outdoor Pools area; Cinquerosso Arte will be present in Riva del Garda, Pad C2, Stand C04. It will provide an overview of its catalog of artworks and present its B2B service.

For Hospitality is the 48th edition and is one of the most important international events in this sector. In the last edition, it had 636 exhibitors and 18,500 visitors. The participation to Hospitality is a great opportunity for Cinquerosso Arte to connect with interior designers, architects, contractors, hotel owners, and hotel chains worldwide. Choosing artworks during the design phase is crucial because it significantly impacts the identity of the spaces, the atmosphere, and ultimately, the guest experience.

Whether it’s a hotel, a restaurant, a bar, or any hospitality structure, artworks can make a difference. Because the chance to choose from a vast catalog of artworks, styles, and techniques, garantees the finest refinement in selection. Cinquerosso Arte positions itself as a competent and reliable partner for designers, capable of bringing significant added value to interior design projects. With its B2B service, an extensive selection of artworks, limited edition fine art prints, and customized projects.

See you in Riva del Garda!

Discover our B2B service for interior design!

andrea rocchi

Andrea Rocchi – My work is passion, emotion, research

Andrea Rocchi, owner of the eponymous Interior Design studio and head of the HoReCa sector for the AIPI (Italian Association of Professional Interior Designers), is the ideal interlocutor to discuss the relationship between architecture and art in contemporary times.

Can you tell us about your work?

I have an interior architecture studio specialized in the HoReCa sector, focusing on projects for hotels and food establishments. Currently, I have about ten collaborators, and we predominantly handle projects for large corporations, public companies, and hotels, ranging from four-star category and above. Additionally, I serve as the national representative for HoReCa within the AIPI, Italian Association of Professional Interior Designers.

What are the peculiarities of your studio?

There are at least two distinctive features of my studio. In addition to having architects and engineers handling technical aspects, we also have architects focusing on communication and graphics related to the food industry. I consider it essential to address this aspect to give substance to valuable projects. Instead of relying on external sources, I preferred to manage communication, now an integral part of our projects, in a complementary way to the interior design.

The second peculiarity, and in this, we are almost unique, is that I always have one or two individuals dedicated to research in design. We strive to understand what will happen in the future, which means both monitoring technological advancements (and thus anticipating potential innovations proposed by companies) and maintaining an observatory on new trends. This is where the role of art comes in because trends are linked to style and taste. When I talk about art, I don’t only refer to visual art but also to music, cinema, theater – all things we delve into and follow to enrich our proposals.

Allow me to make a comparison: we don’t produce ready-made fashion; we aim to showcase on the runway, trying to present always new solutions in line with the times. The difference is that fashion, analytically speaking, has a stylistic research cycle on an annual basis, whereas in our industry, we operate on cycles ranging from three to six years.

Another thing I highly value is the concept of continuous learning. To do this job, as with any profession with a strong individual component, two things are needed: a certain predisposition – let’s call it talent – and a continuous commitment to broaden one’s visions and improve techniques. When conducting an interview while looking for collaborators for my studio, I don’t just look at technical knowledge, etc., but I examine the person’s passion, ethics, and objectives because I am confident that, if present, everything will work at its best.

What motivates you in your work?

My motivation is being able to offer something to people who will live, work, or frequent the environments I design. The first thing we can provide is an emotion, the one derived from the initial impact. Research shows that we form a first impression in seven seconds—seven seconds that will be decisive in our judgment.

This initial impression will be followed by a proper judgment, related to the experience people find themselves living, summarized by the word ‘comfort’—how much the environment makes us feel good and evokes emotions.

Every time I speak in public, I emphasize the importance of emotion. We must experience emotions while working to be able to move our clients, who may be moved to tears when they see their new space, and to be able to stir emotions in the guests who will find themselves in that space.

What role does art play in interior design, from your perspective?

It is extremely important, for two reasons. Firstly, because in the hotels and venues we furnish, we use many images created by artists – from paintings to patterns on wallpaper. Secondly, art is indispensable for that process of continuous learning I mentioned earlier. I insist a lot with my team that they attend exhibitions and stay updated on what is happening in the art world because that’s how taste develops.

What makes Italians so different from others? Why are we so appreciated worldwide? It’s because we are born, raised, and live surrounded by art. Our cities are beautiful, designed by architects, full of statues and iconographies from different eras. Our eyes, our minds, get used to beautiful things: fashion, design, art, architecture, music, literature.

What do you think about Cinquerosso Arte?

I think it’s a beautiful initiative, something that was missing in our industry. No one had ever thought of bringing together artists to offer to architecture studios working in the field of hospitality and dining, providing both quality and prices compatible with installation budgets. That’s why, as soon as I learned about Cinquerosso Arte, I decided to involve it in upcoming projects.

Discover our consultation service for interior design!

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Anita Bortolotti – Fantastic worlds to look beyond

Anita Bortolotti started drawing in her house in the woods, and her source of inspiration is nature. The nature that is transfigured to the limits of the abstract, opening up to all possible interpretations.

Anita, tell us about you.
I’ve always had a passion for drawing and illustration. I remember when I was a child, even before sitting down for breakfast I was already drawing. I was lucky enough to grow up in the middle of nature, in a house in the woods, and I got so much inspiration from that. Later, having attended a classical high school, I devoted very little time to this passion, but then I was admitted to the ISIA in Urbino, where I studied graphic design and visual communication. As I studied, I became more and more convinced that my path was illustration, or at least visual arts; I experimented with various techniques, from screen printing to movable type typography to photography, and this allowed me to broaden my skills in the field of illustration. In short, I have tried to enrich myself through knowledge of different forms of expression and different tools, without ever stopping making illustrations. Now I would like to attend a master’s programme to further specialise. 

How are your artworks works created?

My primary source of inspiration is nature. Natural forms recur in my abstract artworks, but from the original inspiration those forms and colours change and become more and more abstract. The human face also inspires me a lot.When I do not have a precise goal to achieve, I can give free rein to my creativity; then I start from a primary vision, in the sense that I more or less imagine what I want to realise, and then I also leave a lot of room for gestures, instinctively. In doing so, I draw on my background, that is, on the many images I have had and have before my eyes, but also on my studies and my reading. I was read a lot of illustrated books as a child, which allowed me to build up a visual culture that obviously continues to expand. My works are not pure representations of what I see, but rather a way of expressing what I feel: mine is a very emotional art. The result is something that has a specific meaning for me, but I like that it can be freely interpreted by others.

Did it happen to receive comments that surprised you?

Yes. For example, during the pandemic I had made an illustration in which I depicted the connections between people and their ability to adapt to the situation they were experiencing. It was interesting to see how this meaning, which I had not foreseen, came out spontaneously. It means that a work can produce a lot of food for thought: it’s a way of confronting each other and always bringing out something new.

Your art is emotional but also reflective, something that induces thinking.

I hope so. It certainly stems from the emotions I feel and, as I said, from my background. Fantastic, abstract worlds come out of it, and I like to think that they can expand the horizons of the viewer.

How do you get on with Cinquerosso Arte?

I am very happy, first of all because I met Francesca who is a wonderful person on a human and professional level. We had the chance to have a lunch all together, so we got to know each other and I had the chance to hear people of different ages talking about art, with such different experiences. It is a wonderful opportunity to grow, considering that I am only 22 years old.

Discover the art works of Anita Bortolotti!

Giovanni Mercatelli – The adventure of art

Despite his young age, Giovanni has clear ideas about his future and would like to dedicate his life to art. His works reflect an energetic, multifaceted and passionate personality, which has already taken him around the world.

Giovanni, tell us about yourself and your relationship with art.

My relationship with art began when I was a child. My mother tells me that I used to come home from kindergarten all dirty because I was rolling around in paint on huge canvases. Even at home I was surrounded by art materials because my mother made (and still makes) beautiful papier-mâché frames; she is also an interior designer and it’s her habit to visit markets and bring home beautiful objects that have always been a source of inspiration for me. My father, on the other hand, paints with watercolours; his peculiarity is that he always paints the same subject, a seascape, perhaps because he is nostalgic for the times when he lived in the Caribbean. I always breathed art and continued to draw even as a teenager, but this passion started to take a definite shape when – at the age of 19 – I moved to Holland to study.

Did you move to Holland to study art?

No, industrial product design. Unfortunately I didn’t get on well: I didn’t like the city, the climate, it’s been three hard years during which I let off steam by drawing. Art, therefore, came as a way of salvation, as an outlet. The drawings of that period were very dark, very visceral. Even then there were references to the world of comics, because the other way I found to console myself was to read Hugo Pratt. Corto Maltese is a source of great inspiration for me: I dream of an adventurous life like his and that is why after graduating from university I went to live on an island on the other side of the world: in Key West.

Hemingway’s Island.

That’s right. It’s the southernmost point of the United States of America, in the state of Florida, opposite Cuba. I was a guest of a family friend who has an art gallery where she exhibits all the local artists. So I found myself surrounded by works of art overflowing with colour. It was a complete novelty for me, because at that time I only drew in black and white with an Indian ink pen. I stayed there for about a year. I supported myself by working as a bricklayer and meanwhile discovered watercolours, bringing colour into my drawings. My time in Key West was very lonely, because I was there at the time of the pandemic and only old people live on the island, but it was also very peaceful.

And after that?

I returned to Italy to do a master’s degree in sustainability, which I then finished in Holland. At that point, however, I decided to take art more seriously and started to carve out some time for myself. I drew and drew, and in my mind, the intention of ‘going big’ became clear. I then made the decision that once I finished my master’s degree, I would return home and start painting more assiduously, also to see if my works could appeal to someone. I think it is my path and I would like to follow it to the end. I would like to support myself with art and have an adventurous life, as I said.

How are your works created?

I begin to distinguish two processes: one is the instinctive one, whereby I draw without thinking; the second starts from an idea, from something I see around me, from a memory, an object, a reading. I also find that I have favourite colours that I use often: Venetian pink, yellow, lagoon green. Among my sources of inspiration is the director Wes Anderson and I realise I use a palette very similar to his.

How do you get on with Cinquerosso Arte?

Very good! I had a great time at the event on 5 May and was happy to meet the artists. Also, it was the first time I saw my works exhibited and I could see how people reacted when looking at them. I am learning a lot thanks to Cinquerosso Arte.

Discover the art works of Giovanni Mercatelli!

opera d'arte

Polina Stepanova – The alchemical search of self

With her gestural art, based on unpredictable trajectories and imprecise alchemy, Polina imitates the generating force of nature. She loves the idea of an ‘open’ art that can reach anywhere.

Polina, tell us about your path in art.
It all started quite early in my family. My father studied art and my mother studied fashion in St Petersburg, where they met. So I grew up in this world and attended a fashion and design school, where I could also practice music and other disciplines. In short, I had so many possibilities in front of me. As a child I wanted to be an astronaut, and today I find myself making paintings inspired by astrology: life takes strange paths. 

I left St Petersburg to go to Belgium, to attend the Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp, and I started studying fashion. I graduated, but above all I experienced four quite intense years, where I was constantly losing myself and searching for myself: I needed to understand myself in order to decide what my future could be, as an alchemical search of self. Again, I had the opportunity to get to know disciplines related to art, which also helped me to express myself emotionally, and not just technically. 

Later I lived in London and Paris, and about ten years ago I moved to Italy for a consultancy, thinking I would stay for a short time: instead I am still here and have two children. I work as a fashion consultant, and I forecast new trends by linking fashion, sociology and anthropology; I also teach at Polimoda in Florence.

Have you always continued painting, beyond this work?

In part, yes. I used to do press consultancy, I used to do illustrations for private clients, but it was only a year ago that I decided to give more space to art. Maybe the name artist sounded a bit too strong to me and I never called myself that. Instead, a year ago, I decided to start on this path, telling more about it, contacting more people. So I met Francesca and Cinquerosso Arte, and got to know other galleries.

Where do your works come from?

I am very inspired by nature, but by let’s say ‘pagan’ nature, as an elemental and parental force. I like to think of nature when there were no human beings yet, which we then translated as energy: chaos, darkness, sunset, birth. Nature, in short, in its most primordial manifestations and for this I am often inspired by mythology and pagan religions. It is interesting to note the points of contact with science. Take electricity, for example. We are used to think of electricity as something technical, a product of knowledge, instead this force was there at the beginning of time: it is in every atom, in every cell.

I made a series of paintings called Electricity and Electric Sky, which are inspired by this very reflection. Another series is called First Beings, the first beings, which are precisely the ideas of wind, air, the first elements. Other series are connected to the signs of the zodiac, their relationship to the elements, to the most changeable energy and the most stable energy, the energy of destruction, of fire, or of water, of change.

Tell us about your technique, which is quite special.

I find myself very much in the technique called Gesture Painting. I am working with inks based on natural resins, extracted from insects, which are water-repellent and do not dilute: in this way, quite unexpected shapes are created. Moreover, I do not touch the paper: I pour the ink and guide the fall trajectory without being able to fully predict what will happen. 

In this way, matter is transformed, just as nature is transformed: it is the unknown that I like. I feel free from the need for control. Even when a client requests a work from me, he may express preferences for a certain colour or shape, but he has no certainties.

What do you think about Cinquerosso Arte?

I was very happy to be contacted by Francesca. I really liked this vision of an engaging art, open to everyone. Working with very high quality reproductions is something similar to what is happening in the fashion world: there is the one-off piece and then there is ready-to-wear fashion. What Francesca does is ‘ready-made art’, and I find it very interesting. I also feel in tune with the way the artists are selected, not on the basis of curriculum but on the basis of passion, talent and research: there are those who have followed an academic path, those who have always worked with galleries, alongside those who are just starting out. I also really like the possibility of creating a community of artists.

Discover the art works of Polina Stepanova!

Giuseppe Barilaro creates in order to destroy

Giuseppe Barilaro – I want to leave traces of my life

Giuseppe Barilaro creates in order to destroy, he produces forms that he then tears apart, because what matters to him is to express the here and now of artistic action. And he says he is perfectly happy when one of his paintings is discussed at length.

Giuseppe, what has your path been so far?
I studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Catanzaro and graduated in Decoration and Decoration for Sacred Arts. What followed came quite spontaneously; I started painting academically, but I soon lost interest and switched to studying psychology. Later I started to frequent the morgues in Catanzaro attending medical sessions, and there I fell in love with the human body and its pathologies.
At some point I tried to pour all this into art. I start with the classical techniques, i.e. oil painting, acrylic, tempera, and above all the orthodox composition, which includes colour and form, and I paint in a hyperreal way, after which I literally destroy the painting with combustion and tear apart all the forms I had previously created.
I want the painting to emerge on its own, in what remains after the combustion. I have given this practice the name of a pathology, prosopagnosia: the individual does not recognise the face of the subject and sees it differently, obscured, fragmented.

Why this choice?
In my personal philosophy, the face is the only virgin part of the human being. In a person, the face is what is readable by everyone and is always subject to judgement.
After destroying the face, I use a ‘red lava’, the colour is poured onto the support and with the flame it is literally burnt, then it is lacerated with the blade of a box cutter. Mine is an artistic action reminiscent of what happens in the operating theatre. I burn the colour, make it thicken and then cut it with the scalpel. This lacerated red skin is an explosion from which other colours emerge.
These lacerations also refer to the earth, to the furrows that are made for cultivation, so much so that I created a collection of 15 paintings that I called ‘Between the plough and the uncultivated land’.

What drives you to paint?
I want to leave tangible, sharp, bad traces. I am convinced that art has to change certain codes. My lacerations are traces of experience, which take into account what is happening in the world: what I see is an immense destruction, a bit Schopenhauer-like. I am fascinated by the idea that very little of the subject remains in my works. That there is a marriage between the subject itself and the destructive act, something that – in the niche of a painting – bears witness to the fact that ‘there’ something happened. Like the furrows I mentioned earlier, in which there is a marriage and the earth waits for water to germinate. Art for me has to abandon rhetoric, it has to say nothing, but find the right time in the right place.

Normally people talk about artists as creative people. Do you define yourself as more creative or destructive?
I have to say that I don’t really like the words ‘artist’ and ‘creativity’. I prefer to be in that place with that object, for something that is going to happen. I could call myself an alchemist, although it is a rather overused word. If I really have to define myself, I prefer to say that I am a painter. What gives me satisfaction is knowing that one of my paintings has found the right place, has found a home, perhaps in a context I had not foreseen. This fascinates me about art.

So how do you imagine a work of yours in a house or a hotel, for example?
That is exactly what I like, because I would like my paintings to be defended and discussed. I would like people to do more than just look at them. That is why I prefer them to be bought by people with little economic potential. If one of my paintings is bought by a collector it will end up with other paintings as a collector’s item. Instead, I am fascinated by the idea that one of my paintings is there in front of people’s eyes while they are at the table, and becomes an object of discussion. I would like it to bring emotions, feelings and therefore also a need to talk and share. In all this, the artist must remain behind the scenes, leaving the scene to the painting itself.

What do you think of Cinquerosso Arte?
It is a marvel! I am really in love with the people who are part of the project and their production. And then the atmosphere one breathes is one of great affection: when I was in Bologna, I was full of smiles.

Discover the artworks of Giuseppe Barilaro!

opere in tecnica mista collage su sfondo colorato

Erika Garbin – Art is therapeutic for me

Erika has managed to combine two great passions – art and love for others – by working in art therapy. Hers is a complex and profound world, because her art investigates and questions the mental schemes in which we all risk being trapped to some extent.

Erika, tell us about your story.

My baptism into the world of art dates back to when I was very young. I had an uncle who painted and he often took me with him. I loved going around with him and his watercolours to watch him paint. That’s why I always had clear ideas: I wanted to attend art school and then the Academy of Fine Arts and that’s how it was. Unfortunately it is not easy to make a living with this kind of education, but I followed another passion and started working in social work. I got a job in a psychiatric community as an operator, they gave me the opportunity to do painting and so I started to study art therapy. Since then I have always associated art with disability and psychiatry, in all areas and with people of all ages. I currently work in a Multipurpose Medical Centre and hold creative workshops in a small school attended by children with major disabilities, including autism.

What happens in their lives when they encounter art?

The first benefit is the relaxing effect. Kids generally need to find an environment that calms them down, where they can concentrate. Being able to get a boy to stay in a classroom, decrease vocalising, prevent him from wandering around and reduce aggression are very important results. When they paint they relax, mentally and physically. For me, their drawings are real works of art and many times I take inspiration from what they do. Neurodivergent people have an expressive freedom that we do not have, and this can be a source of inspiration. It was important for me to confront myself with them, because when I started ‘producing’ art again, after the Academy, I had lost my hand a bit with drawing: so I started with collage, a technique that I use a lot with my kids and that I have gradually deepened for my works.

Are there recurring themes in your works?

For a few years now I have been working on the concept of the ‘feminine’, in a somewhat provocative way. In the collages, for example, there are often these somewhat glossy and stereotypical figures of women from magazines from the 1960s, where they explained how to iron, how to cook and so on. From there I continued by printing on paper patterns and making needle and thread works: in short, I started mending images and objects.

What is behind this mending of yours?

Well, it wasn’t immediately clear to me but I think it’s a bit like mending a wound. This stereotyped family dimension, where there is the woman with all her well-defined and repetitive tasks, is for me something that requires an intervention. For me this is also therapeutic. I call the work a ‘product’, because it is the testimony of something that happened, of an act that had an effect on me and left beautiful marks. 

What do you think of Cinquerosso Arte?

I think it is a beautiful initiative. I have seen a special attention, a special care, and I regret that I am not able to participate much in the various meetings between the collaborators. However, I already have some works ready that I would like to send, so I hope you will see some new ones soon.

Discover the artworks of Erika Garbin!

Rocco Casaluci – Mine is a training in watching

Son and brother of photographers, Rocco Casaluci has always lived among film, lenses and photographic paper, but also among stages and country lanes, with the clear and sharp gaze of the observer.

Rocco, tell us about yourself.
I was born in Salento and, after a parenthesis in Verona during which I worked as an apprentice in the studio of one of my brothers, I lived most of my life in Bologna. My technical training then continued by working for various art galleries, reproducing works and creating catalogues. At the same time I have always carried on a great passion for the theatre, and by the strange cases of life I managed to reconcile the two by becoming the official photographer of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna, from 2007 until 2021.
Of all the aspects of a photographer’s work, the one I have always loved most is the moment of printing. As we know, throughout the 20th century and until the advent of digital photography, the figure of the photographer was very different from that of today: you worked in a darkroom and you needed tools, materials and skills that were not within everyone’s reach.

Has your profession influenced your feeling as an artist?
Yes, theatre has allowed me to ‘connect the dots’. Stage photography is not interpretive, in the sense that you have to respect everyone’s work and enhance the spirit of the work, and it is very technical. This led me to take on the role of privileged observer, because I worked during rehearsals, in close contact with directors and actors. Moreover, this profession trained me in waiting. I watched the birth of the show, and it was really a matter of waiting for the right moment, the decisive one. After all, I came from the analogue school, which was already made up of slow times and waiting: the time of the shot, the time of development, selection, printing and possibly retouching. As the etymology itself says, photography is a describing with light.

And what is it today?
Today, everything happens in a rush, in a kind of bulimia of images. I, on the other hand, like photography that allows you to observe details. In a scene, for example, I am not only interested in the main focus, but also in what is around it. The Sangallo lace curtains, the gentleman in the corner reading the newspaper, a photograph that – like life – is most beautiful if it is present in the here and now.

Has your photography changed over time?
Yes, it has dried up to the project I presented at Cinquerosso Arte: Sponte plantis. As I said, I have always loved black and white and in this project I apply it to the extreme, subtracting colour from flowers and plants, arranged against a neutral background. What I try to do with my photography is a training in looking, not just seeing; something for which you have to go beyond the eye as an organ of sight but move on to the organ of the mind. I use a macro lens to capture every detail and induce the viewer to pause, to get closer to observe closely. I choose spontaneous, humble plants, which go unnoticed also because of the speed with which we move, and I treat them as if they were people, as if I were making a portrait of the plant. I work a lot in the studio, but there are cases when it is better to go out into the field to capture a particular moment, for example the hatching of the petals. Nature is really amazing, with its geometry and architecture, and it never ceases to surprise.

How do you find yourself in the Cinquerosso Arte team?
I am happy and grateful to be involved, because I very much share the idea of an art within the reach of all lovers of beauty, not just the wealthy. I myself love to turn my works into small objects to give to people I care about. Art in this way is a gesture of love.

Discover the artworks of Rocco Casaluci!

colore viola evento sia

Cinquerosso Arte at SIA – International Hospitality Hall D5, Stand 085

From 11th to 13th October, Cinquerosso Arte will be present with its own stand at the SIA Hospitality Design in Rimini, hall D5, stand 085.

The SIA Hospitality Design has become part of InOut|The Contract Community, and will take place in conjunction with TTG Travel Experience. It’s one of the main Italian showcases for the hotel industry and accommodation facilities in general. It will therefore be a huge event dedicated to hospitality and tourism, sectors in which Italy has so much to offer.

Cinquerosso Arte will exhibit its wide selection of artworks bringing it to the attention of architects, contractors, hotel owners and accommodation decision makers, to all those who may be interested in enhancing the guest experience with quality art. Cinquerosso Arte’s main interlocutors are in fact operators in the world of hôtellerie: it is in this sphere, after all, that it is useful to be able to choose from many works of art – with different styles, techniques, colour ranges, formats – always being able to count on the intrinsic value of the work and the great care taken in fine art printing, while respecting budgets.

The SIA, the International Hospitality Exhibition, is one of the most important trade fairs dedicated to hotels, camping and glamping in our country, where sector operators from all over the world converge every year. The 2023 edition will be particularly rich and will explore every aspect of hospitality, ranging from interior design to self check-in applications, from hotel services to product supply, from audio and video technologies to outdoor furniture.

For Cinquerosso Arte, born in spring 2022, this is the first official presence at this prestigious event that attracts professionals and visitors from every continent. At stand 085, Hall D5, you will be able to view a roundup of the more than 40 artists who collaborate with the e-commerce platform, and you will have the opportunity to learn more about the B2B service. See you in Rimini!

Discover the works of Giulio Brandelli!

render proposte arredo interior design

The top 5 Interior styles most used for design projects

What are the 5 most commonly used interior design styles by professionals in the field of home decor?

Finding an answer to this question can be challenging because there is a wide variety of styles, and there is a tendency to combine elements from different styles to give spaces greater personalization and a more defined identity.

However, there are interior design styles that are increasingly prevalent not only in private residences but also in hotels, restaurants, bars, and various hospitality establishments.

In this brief overview of the 5 most used interior design styles, we have to start from the classic style.Timeless and suitable for spacious and elegant homes like villas or European-inspired hotels, it features curved and baroque lines, seemingly without edges, dark colors, and soft lighting. Recently, there are also references to Art Deco with its modernist allure. Important elements include carpets, significant curtains, upholstered chairs and armchairs.

Furniture is made of solid wood, and chandeliers are often made of crystal or have a striking impact. The classic style incorporates the use of marble, both for floors and details. The atmosphere is soft, warm, reassuring, and intense. Among the most appreciated interior design styles, contemporary style stands out. Characterized by clean and straight lines, it suits apartments of any size and penthouses, preferably well-lit. It is a minimalistic style with functional furniture and a design focused on ensuring ergonomics and technological integration (home automation is welcome in such environments). Decorative elements are minimal, as empty spaces prevail. Various materials are used, from wood to stone, steel, and glass, as long as they are balanced to avoid one overpowering the others. Colors are generally neutral, such as white and gray, with strong contrasting accents. The atmosphere is comfortable, expressing elegance and sobriety.

Another style gaining popularity in Italian cities is the industrial style. Born in 1950s New York, it originated from the conversion of old industrial structures into living spaces. Industrial design is typically applied when furnishing a space originally not intended for housing. This results in open spaces with large windows or high windows, columns, beams, pipes, and volumes that extend upwards, perfect for lofts. The palette is dark, with strong warm-cold contrasts from materials like metal, wood, concrete, and brick. Furniture and furnishings are usually vintage or reclaimed. Lighting includes a mix of artificial and natural light. The atmosphere is intriguing, urban, suitable for conviviality.

A timeless decorating style is the rustic one. Suitable for country houses or places surrounded by greenery, it involves plenty of wood, including colored wood, wrought iron, wallpaper, linen, cotton fabrics, embroidery, and many indoor plants. The color palette is light, with pastel shades. Furniture can be more or less refined, often leaning towards shabby chic. In establishments like bars or restaurants, the decor is sometimes intentionally “unmatched.” In homes, the kitchen holds great importance as a place for gathering and sharing. The atmosphere is romantic, with a family and childhood flavor.

A style suitable for any environment, whether in the city or countryside, private residence or transitional space, is undoubtedly boho chic. It is an eclectic interior design style characterized by a reference to the bohemian era from which it takes its name. Creative, fun, and exaggerated, it features seemingly inconsistent decor at first glance but does not result in confusion. Elements include wood, wicker, fabrics, reclaimed furniture, colonial and ethnic echoes, vintage elements from the ’50s and ’60s, and above all, lots of color.

he atmosphere is lively and welcoming, resembling a lived-in and joyous living room.

Naturally, for each of these interior design styles, it is essential to choose artworks that harmonize perfectly with the overall design. For this, one can turn to the B2B service of Cinquerosso Arte, which, with its wide variety of selected artists, can identify the perfect artwork for the project.

Discover how to decorate your hotel with art!

raffigurazione di omini immaginari

Giulio Brandelli – I draw the invisible spectators of my life

A musician and all-round creative artist, Giulio recalls the imaginary friends of his childhood in his works to have them always at his side. His is a spontaneous and ardent art, joyful but also profound.

Tell us about your artistic training.
I have an innate talent for drawing, which came out at a very young age. It often happened that, in primary school, the teachers thought my drawings were actually done by an adult. However, I had no real education because my parents preferred other paths for me. I attended accountancy instead of art school, but to compensate and nurture my creative side I studied trumpet at the conservatory. I am also a musician, therefore, and I still play. With covid I started painting again more assiduously, changing style radically. Before, mine was a realistic drawing and my subjects were women’s bodies or faces. At some point I started to feel that the rules of portraiture and realism in general were too restrictive. So I went back to my roots, to what I loved doing as a child.

Your bizarre creatures…
Already as a child I used to combine human and animal bodies to create anthropomorphic figures, and I have been doing something similar again. As a friend of mine says, they are the imaginary friends from childhood that used to live under the bed, and now I have brought them out. I call them ‘little drawings’ or ‘little monsters’, and on the surface they just look like funny creatures. In reality there is something deeper behind them: they are the invisible spectators of my life, silently and amusedly observing what I do and what happens to me. I have just gone through a very difficult experience in my family, an experience that made me feel a lot of fear and led me to reflect on what is really important in life. There is also this in my works.

What techniques do you use?
Different techniques, I like to change and I have a good manual dexterity, so I can do many things, whether it’s cooking or sculpting wood or crocheting. At first it was just watercolours, then I switched to a mixed technique. I use very thick sheets of watercolour paper, on which I prepare a base by mixing watercolours, inks, markers, pens, pencils. I usually start from an idea, a concept (for example, the feeling of never having enough time, which is something we all experience), at which point figures come to mind and I let themselves be guided by their shapes.

If you had to associate your art with a musical genre, what would it be?
I play in a street band, and I think it reflects my art perfectly. Inside there is a bit of abstractionism, a bit of cubism, there is the style of murals… Something vital and communicative.

What do you think of Cinquerosso Arte?
I joined immediately with great enthusiasm because I think it has a lot of potential. I really enjoyed meeting the other artists, also because it’s something that doesn’t happen very often. As a musician there are many more opportunities to meet and exchange ideas, whereas the art world is a bit more closed and there are fewer opportunities for contact. In Cinquerosso Arte, I have seen a close-knit and well-set group, and I really hope that this project will bring good things to everyone. They are special people.

Discover the works of Giulio Brandelli!

intervista Paolo Tamburini

Paolo Tamburini – Photography allows me to look beyond

Ironic, disorienting, light but not fatuous, Paolo Tamburini’s photographs are born of thought and skill and draw overlapping realities. Limpid layers of luminous revelations.

How did you get into photography?

Photography was my second great artistic passion. I am the son of a singer and I studied cello as a child, but could not graduate from the conservatory due to tendinitis. My first memories of photography date back to my childhood: my father (who was an enthusiast) ‘forced’ me and my sisters to look at slides of our family trips. Around the age of 16, I started to explore this world with a friend. I would secretly take my father’s Canon 35 mm, of which he was very jealous, and go with my friend to take photos in the countryside and abandoned colonies. The leap to digital took place in my university days. Parallel to my studies in literature, I attended photography courses, including darkroom courses, and seminars with professionals in the field. It was at that time that they started asking me for commissioned photographs.

After graduation I started teaching, but during the pandemic I abandoned this career and devoted myself entirely to photography. I now work with a communications agency specialising in interior design.

What are you working on at the moment?

For my latest work, I let myself be guided by the call of the night atmospheres. The project, which I initially called ‘Magic Nights’, is an exploration of the lights that populate the night in my city: urban shots, views, corners of residential areas. Then a second urgency emerged: I wanted to try to represent my city and its surroundings as a colony on a distant abandoned planet. This is how ‘Planet Rimini’ was born, in which I imagine a father and daughter wandering through alien environments and scenarios.

So you don’t just photograph reality, you transform it.

In a way, yes. I like this approach to photography: I see it as training to constantly renew my way of looking. Life does not end with what we see, but there is so much we cannot perceive. The arts, such as photography, are sometimes able to reveal this ‘other’ that is there but not noticed at first sight. For example, in the summer of 2021, I worked on a series of photos I called ‘Aestatica’, featuring inflatable mats in the shape of animals or fruit, in ‘realistic’ settings. It was a hymn to the imagination and the gaze of children, who see those objects as copies of reality and at the same time as real.

There is clearly an ironic vein in you.

Yes, it is a choice. In contemporary photography we see so much unease, so much fatigue, so much loneliness and narcissism. It is our reality and it is right to represent and interpret it artistically. I try not to ‘wallow’ in discomfort; I try to emphasise the positive that I see, I would like not to provide further sounding boards for discomfort.

You are also a musician. Do you see links between music and photography?

Yes, many. In particular, there is a common word: composition. I find it a nice bridge between these two forms of artistic expression. You create a composition from something you have in mind (what in music is the theme), then you make arrangements by bringing in your own culture, your conscious or unconscious references. Preparing a set, especially for still life, is a similar operation to the musical arrangements that go into making up the whole. But then there are more ‘risky’ situations, as in reportage, where you have to pull out the composition instantly: you all become a bit like jazz musicians improvising melodies on the spot.

What do you think of Cinquerosso Arte?

I was very impressed by Francesca Fazioli’s desire to start with the good relations between us. I have had the opportunity to get to know all the members of the group, on several occasions, and you can clearly see that Francesca cares about building a team, that we are good together. I was happy to meet other artists, with whom a friendly relationship has begun. Cinquerosso Arte has already given me so much.

Discover Paolo Tamburini photographs!

decorare con l'arte il tuo hotel

How to decorate your hotel with art

In the hospitality sector, there is an increasing awareness of how important it is to decorate hotels with art. It is not just a matter of embellishing a wall, but of creating an unforgettable stay experience for the customer.

Works of art are essential to create a comfortable and welcoming environment for the hotel guest. Not only that: what makes the fortune of a hotel is its ability to imprint itself in the memory of the customer, who will thus be enticed to return and recommend the hotel. This is why it would be a serious mistake not to take care of the choice of artwork decorating the lobby, rooms and common areas. Each one of us has certainly stayed in hotels of which we can remember almost nothing, because the structure was only designed to offer services.

Instead, we remember well the hotels in which we felt welcomed and cared for, the hotels that had a personality, a very precise identity.

But what are the main elements to take into consideration when you decorate a hotel with art?

-First of all, the style and corporate image.

If the identity of the hotel has been well established, a style will have been decided (essential, elegant, futuristic, shabby chic and so on) and a colour palette will have been selected. It is imperative that the artwork is in harmony with these choices. But beware, it is not necessarily the case that – for example – a modern style cannot be matched by works with a retro flavour. It is a question of knowing how to skillfully balance styles to emphasise the work and enhance the identity of the hotel. In this case, Cinquerosso Arte’s consultancy service can be particularly useful, precisely because it makes it possible to identify the most suitable works without settling for the most obvious solution.

Furniture and spaces.

The artwork should blend well with the chosen décor and the available space. This means that the work will have to be placed where it can best be enhanced and in turn enhance its surroundings. To give a rather simple example, a very small work in a very large room disappears, while a very large work in a small room risks being visually cumbersome and inappropriate. Similarly, a work that is oversized compared to the furniture debases the furniture itself, and vice versa. And again: if the work is intended to be seen from afar, it must have a strong visual impact, while a very detailed work must be placed where it can be observed from close up. These principles are valid for any interior design project, whether it be a private home or a public place, but they are even more important in a hotel, where spaces must be balanced to the millimetre to guarantee functionality and ergonomics without sacrificing taste.Even in this case, being able to choose between different formats of the same work makes it possible to find the perfect match between art and hotel furnishings, and this is why Cinquerosso Arte offers various possibilities for customisation.

Atmosphere.

In a hotel, atmosphere is everything. It is from the atmosphere that the guest perceives that he or she will have a pleasant experience that will remain etched in the memory. Creating the right atmosphere means, for example, choosing the right subjects, styles and colours for the different areas of the hotel. A work that is perfect for the restaurant room might be out of place in the room, because it all depends on the emotion you want to arouse in the guest. Furthermore, regardless of location, all works must express the overall atmosphere of the hotel with different nuances. For example, a B&B in the mountains will try to create a very different atmosphere from a hotel in a metropolis or one on the Riviera. The artwork in a hotel must be consistent with each other and differentiated according to location. In this case too, Cinquerosso Arte can assist interior designers in identifying the right works.

Budget.

By no means a trivial factor, the budget cannot be overlooked. No hotel has unlimited resources, and works of art can be very expensive. It is therefore necessary to find the right balance between the quality of the works and spending capacity. It would be a mistake to think only in terms of savings (e.g. by buying works of little value) for all the reasons listed above, and also because quality does not age: a quality work of art is not affected by fashions and retains its appeal over time. Rather, it is a question of finding works of excellent quality at prices that are congruent with the hotel’s ambitions. Everyone has a right to beauty, even when travelling. It is the principle of accessible art that led to the creation of Cinquerosso Arte, and it is the reason why this project is so interesting for those who have to decorate a hotel.

Discover how to decorate your hotel with art thanks to our consulting service!

Giulio Rigoni Arte Mistica

Giulio Rigoni – My art is a mystical art

Impassive faces like Byzantine icons, constructions as precise as they are improbable, dreamlike scenes suspended in an indefinite time. Giulio Rigoni‘s mystical art awakens multitudes of memories and impressions, strictly without a reading guide.

Giulio, tell us your artistic story.

I studied art history at university, but then life took me elsewhere. I moved to London and started working in advertising. However, this passion for art resurfaced and I started painting almost for fun. In my work I am very much inspired by my first love: late Gothic art. It is an art that straddles the Byzantine style, which is so far removed from naturalism, and the Renaissance, which instead delved into the discovery of nature and verisimilitude. In the late Gothic period, people began to work on the human figure, but the human figure continued to have more spiritual than realistic forms. This is something that fascinates me a lot, and it was the starting point for my work.

You have a very personal and recognisable style, which in some cases recalls the atmospheres of One Thousand and One Nights. Are there direct references?

I am not directly inspired by these tales, but I can be described as a traditionalist and I am fascinated by classical cultures, including Middle Eastern ones. I also like the somewhat dreamy settings, which certainly draw on fairy-tale imagery. The key to my art is precisely the transition between reality and fiction, where the latter helps to better understand the former. If I had to describe my art in one word, I would call it mystical. I do not like to give interpretations or keys to interpretations, precisely because I like to think that everyone can find something different in my works. To live a unique and, indeed, mystical experience.

What do you draw inspiration for your artwork?

Often it is themes that give rise to series. For example, I designed the series of towers, which are all different from each other although they start from a common idea. I like architecture in general, and perhaps I am a failed architect. I like geometries, I like buildings from the past. This jumble of imaginative forms amuses me and always gives me stimuli. More and more often, I also work on commissions; in this case, the client asks me to interpret memories, narratives, which I usually realise on several boards.

You love black backgrounds a lot.

For backgrounds, I also love red and blue a lot, but in general my palette is rather limited: I use about 12 colours and they are always the same.What do you think of the Cinquerosso Arte project?I am very happy to be involved, also because a good friendship has developed with Francesca Fazioli and I like her enthusiasm a lot. Moreover, this collaboration came at the right time, because I have been interested in fine art printing for some time. With this type of very high quality reproduction, the work of art becomes more accessible and democratic, and I would like to explore its potential in relation to some of my works.

Discover mystical art by Giulio Rigoni!

armocromia: scegliere la giusta palette per gli ambienti della casa

Harmochromy and interior design – Choosing the right palette for the rooms in your home

According to the principles of Harmochromy, it is important to choose the right palette for the rooms in your home. But what does this mean in concrete terms?

Let’s start from the beginning. Harmochromy (a term brought to the attention by Rossella Migliaccio in her 2019 best seller) has become a very popular theme in relation to cosmetics and clothing. As the word itself suggests, it involves identifying shades that are in harmony with the complexion as well as hair and eye colour. The set of colours that best suit a person is called a palette. Today, it is very common to classify these palettes into ‘seasons‘ and their subgroups.

Knowing whether we are more ‘winter‘ or more ‘spring‘ is a useful guide for choosing a dress or make-up, but what does this have to do with interior design and especially with art?

In fact, the principles of Harmochromy do not only apply to the person, but also apply to the spaces in which we live. Finding the right palette for the rooms in one’s home, as suggested by the experts in colour matching, does not only mean matching colours well with each other, but also exploiting them to act on people’s perception of space and wellbeing. Colours and shades are elements that interior designers must take into account to ensure balance in the furnishings, also in relation to the purpose of the room itself and the personality of the person living in it. Depending on the colours chosen, for example, a kitchen may convey an idea of order, or liveliness or warmth. For a bedroom we will probably choose relaxing tones. But what counts is not the colour itself: it is above all the combinations. Just like sounds, colours can be ‘out of tune’, jarring, pleasant or engaging. Colours can also be ‘cumbersome’: a dark palette will give the idea of a more cosy and intimate environment, but if you overdo it you risk giving a sense of seclusion. Very light colours enhance the space in the home, but can be cold and anonymous. In short, it’s all about delicate balancing acts, and of course the artwork must also contribute to the overall effect. This is why, when applying harmonisation to the rooms of a home, the palette must also be respected when choosing works of art. Indeed, in some cases one can start from the artwork itself and be guided by it. The peculiarity of artists is precisely that of knowing how to choose tones and combinations to communicate and arouse emotions, which is why interior designers can also choose to be inspired by a painting or a photograph when deciding on the colours of a piece of furniture. If you want to see some examples, visit the pages of the artists of Cinquerosso Arte and you will notice that the placement of works in the various rooms is done in respect of the palette, in perfect harmony.

Andrea Piccioli Arte

Andrea Piccioli – Art for me is, above all, relationships

At a very young age, Andrea Piccioli already has behind him a dense history full of adventures, in which art gives face to emotions, creates bonds and always gives birth to something new.

How did you come to art?

I started drawing at a very young age, partly because it was the only way my parents had found to keep me quiet. When I was 8, I was struck down with an autoimmune disease and had to spend a year in hospital; during that time, art helped me a lot: I drew, read, listened to music, watched films. It was then that I fell in love with Miyazaki and started dreaming of writing and illustrating stories. I haven’t stopped drawing since and I do it all the time, either as an activity in itself or as a simple pastime, maybe while I’m at a club with friends. You could say that I have been doing it professionally since I was a child, because I already sold some works in middle school.

Did you have any specific training?

I studied at art school, so I was able to learn about the art world and develop different techniques. I used to spend weekends drawing and painting on the street with one of my closest friends. We would put on some music and make drawings, even in collaboration. I would then sell them for free, because I could not evaluate my own work, so I would ask others to do so. I was confronted with the world and received great encouragement from it, I met many new people who are still part of my life today. From there I received commissions for murals, shutters, events, exhibitions and live performances. I am very passionate about the latter, because I am especially interested in the relationship with the other. In my teenage years, I started to create my own increasingly defined aesthetic, in a quest that obviously still continues. At that time, I started working on faces, representing my moods, the set of emotions I felt. I try, in short, to give a face to my feeling, to have a more real relationship with it.

Art is therefore central to your life.

Yes. Art defines me. I feel the need to express myself through art, and this leads me to very meaningful experiences. After high school, for example, I left and went to an island in Canada of the same size as Corsica but inhabited by just 5,000 people. The idea was to stay for a short time and then resume the journey, but I found myself in the middle of the pandemic. All connections were severed and I spent several months there. At first I worked as a cook and gardener’s helper, but then the local people got to know me and appreciate what I was doing. Different communities live there in harmony: there are indigenous families, but also Americans, Europeans, Asians and Africans. The island welcomed me, and I spent the rest of my stay doing work for the community and for individuals. Among other things, I helped build a shelter in the forest, for which I decorated rooms, kitchens, doors, etc.

An unforgettable experience.

Absolutely. Alone, on the other side of the world, I was able to communicate and create a relationship with these people precisely through art. After all, my conception of art is very close to the relational aesthetics that Nicolas Bourriaud talks about. I am interested in the relationship between art and life, between art and humanity.

How does Cinquerosso Arte fit into all this?

Again, it all stems from a relationship, because I came to Cinquerosso Arte thanks to a friend. I thank him and Francesca for letting me join this team, because it allowed me to get closer to the Italian art scene. Until now, I have always ‘worked from below’, in the streets, in social centres, in festivals. Having my work printed in this new context is a great opportunity for me.

Discover artworks by Andrea Piccioli!

Ogni casa è un concerto

Every home is a concert – Interview with Nicola Grandolini, Vice-President AIPI

Cinquerosso Arte has joined AIPI, the Italian Association of Professional Interior Designers. Nicola Grandolini explains why it is so important to include works of art in interior design projects.

What is your organisation about?

AIPI has existed for over 50 years and is the only one in our country to represent this category. The figure of the interior designer is often confused with that of the interior decorator, but in reality it is a specific profession. We are concerned with the quality of people’s lives, starting with the spaces they live in or visit.

What is the role of the interior designer?

First of all, it must be made clear that it is a figure in its own right, with more specific skills than an architect. A bit like medicine: there is general medicine and then there are specialists. We are the interior specialists. We don’t have site management like architects, but we have the conceptual and creative direction of the interior concept. Our approach, therefore, is based on collaboration with installers, craftsmen, professionals and all the technicians involved in the project. It is necessarily a team effort. Think of a great architect such as Gaudí: he could never have achieved what he did without being able to count on very good collaborators such as cabinetmakers, blacksmiths, etc.

About collaborations, Cinquerosso Arte has just joined your organisation. What do you think about it?

We are happy to have the contribution of Cinquerosso Arte. We need partners, and being able to develop a project together with Cinquerosso Arte means being able to have artists in the team, who have the power to create emotions within other emotions. An interior designer can choose a work of art in tune with the project he has in mind, but the opposite can also happen: you can start from a work of art, from the emotions it expresses, and build the concept of a space around it.

So it is important to take art into account when imagining a piece of furniture?

Certainly. An interior designer has the task of organising environments around the wellbeing of the people who inhabit and frequent them, from the home to the school, from the conference room to the hospital. And it is something that is of great importance in everyone’s life. It is no coincidence that we also have psychotherapists among our staff. A non-harmonious environment is harmful. Covid has forced everyone to reflect on this issue, because so many people have found themselves locked in ‘disjointed’ dwellings, not organised to ensure well-being. Let us think of a house. If we want a person to be able to say ‘I feel really good in this environment’, we have to take into account their habits but also their emotions. That is why it is important to also include art and to do so in an organic way. The entry of Cinquerosso Arte into our association will allow us to have many works of art, many styles and many visions, and to develop collaborations for the benefit of our customers.

How do you carry out your work?

We are the tailors who have to make the right dress for the customer, a dress in which he feels comfortable. We always start with an in-depth dialogue with the customer to understand his needs, preferences and lifestyle. In short, we start with a dialogue with the customer, we collaborate with many professionals, supervising the work of all of them, to ensure people’s well-being.

A house, a hospital, a school, a hotel, an office… in short, any environment is a concert, and we interior designers are the conductors.

What are the tasks of your organisation?

As an association we are active not only in protecting this professional figure, but also in creating collaborations and synergies. For example, we are founding members of POLI.design of the Milan Polytechnic, we collaborate with schools and universities associated with us such as the Iuav in Venice. Our members work in Italy and around the world, and of course we have active collaborations internationally. We have just organised, for example, a convention in Florence with Ifi (International Federation of Interior Architects/Designers) and Ecia (European Council of Interior Architects).

We have recently created a technical-scientific committee for the development and qualification of the figure of the interior designer at European level. Another novelty in recent times is our registration with Mise, at the Ministry of Business and Made in Italy, following which we have also taken an active role in training. Now we have to build in-depth and up-to-date courses, and we can also do this thanks to the universities that are starting to offer degree courses in interior design.

Maria Paola Grifone – The real world questions me

She calls herself permeable, Maria Paola Grifone. Permeable to so many stimuli, from a shadow on a wall to a news story, which she feels the need to investigate through art. Painting in order to know, then, as she explains in very clear words.

Maria Paola, can you tell us about your path?

I went to a traditional art school, where they still drew a lot, and perhaps that is why I am so attached to copying from life. Later I attended a course for fashion designers, but I realised that I was more interested in fashion illustration than in making models, so I decided to enrol at the Academy of Fine Arts. Here I took the painting course and was able to deepen my artistic identity, including through exhibitions and everything that revolved around that environment.

What techniques do you usually use?

It depends a lot on the periods. The different techniques I use are united by their immediacy of execution. So, for example, Indian ink on glossy paper allows me a direct execution; I don’t need to make sketches or study the subject, what happens on paper is the result of a continuous flow between me, the subject itself and what I use to represent it, in this case Indian ink. In this last period I am using charcoal, fusage, powdered graphite on paper or prepared canvas. Let’s say that I use extremes of matter: Indian ink is very liquid, and glides on paper, while graphite powder, or charcoal, are dry materials, i.e. the exact opposite. I still don’t understand if there is a reason for my going from one extreme to the other. In any case, for me technique cannot be distinguished from content. If I use oil or acrylic, for example, it is because what I want to express can only be expressed with oil or acrylic. This game of ‘opposites’ has led me to the essentiality of black and white, which has become indispensable for my expressive needs. It is a contrast that brings out the most human contradictions: life and death, light and darkness… everything that we are.

What are your sources of inspiration?

It is not easy to answer this question. Let’s say I am slowly discovering them, I am becoming aware of them. I find inspiration by observing reality, starting with objects, or faces, for example. I have done some work on shadows on walls, to give another example. I realised that when my gaze rests on something, I have to investigate.

Lately I have been attracted to topical issues, so I am working on war and suffering. In this case my sources are the media, from newspapers to the web. I look for and look at endless images, everywhere.

I am also inspired by music – which I listen to daily – music videos, or films. Even a conversation or an article can stimulate me, perhaps to reflect on a social or psychological aspect. I am very permeable.

I like to look, I like to listen, and if something strikes me I feel the need to explore it and represent it.

Currently on cinquerossoarte.com there are The Hidden Forms, Equilibrium, Inside Me and Black Vase. What can you tell us about these works?

They are objects represented from life, with which I have an emotional connection. What they have in common is that they are containers. They are not empty, in short. I liked to play – once again – with opposites: the full and the empty in a white, almost eternal space, without connotations. The technique I used, Indian ink on photographic paper, allowed me to achieve that immediacy I mentioned. It is a non-control that leaves room for what freely happens while I paint, even when it comes to ‘mistakes’: often it is these that surprise me and take the image where I want it. It is a technique of realisation, but it is also a metaphor for life, which works just like this, for unforeseen events and smudges.

What are you working on at the moment?

At the moment I am investigating a very hot topic, which is the relationship between man and technology. What I feel is emerging and what I represent is a humanity that, faced with complexity, seeks an escape route. They are figures immersed in a physical void, with a lot of white underlining this distance between us and reality. You will soon see them on cinquerossoarte.com.

Discover Artworks by Maria Paola Grifone!

Buon compleanno Cinquerosso Arte

Happy Birthday Cinquerosso Arte!

On May 5, 2022, Cinquerosso Arte’s adventure officially began. Twelve months later, we can already make an initial assessment, between expectations and perspectives. We talk about it with Francesca Fazioli, the mind and heart of the project.

Francesca, thinking back to a year ago, what is the first thing that comes to your mind?

I remember in particular the excitement of those days. Even though the official launch of Cinquerosso Arte took place on May 5, we already had several months of work behind us, during which we nurtured the idea and the project, giving it substance day after day.

At that time, the future was full of unknowns, because we were treading a new path, but we were animated by a great energy. And I must say that that energy has never faded, but on the contrary has gradually grown, fuelled also by the enthusiasm of our artists, both those already present from the very beginning and those who have gradually been added.

Are you satisfied with the results obtained in the name of Affordable Art?

Yes. My idea was to give greater visibility and market to Italian emerging artists, and I think I hit the mark by deciding to invest in talent. It is a great satisfaction to note that there have been so many adhesions over time. Today, very young emerging artists and others – more experienced ones – collaborate with Cinquerosso Arte, people who make their living from art and others who have found in art a parallel way to express themselves. In any case, the artworks quality is extraordinary, as you can see by browsing through our art gallery.

Are there any episodes that you remember with particular pleasure?

There are so many, it is impossible to list them all. Certainly the participation in some important trade fair events, which was exciting in many respects. For a fledgling company like ours, it was a great impact to participate in an international event like Maison et Objet in Paris. We took part in Sia in Rimini, the trade fair dedicated to hospitality, where, among other things, we had the privilege of making the acquaintance of Marcello Ceccaroli, an architect of great weight in the world of hôtellerie. We were also among those who animated Artefiera White Night 2023, on the occasion of the prestigious art fair in Bologna, with an extraordinary opening of our spaces and a live painting of great emotional impact that garnered much interest. Again, I can mention with great satisfaction the fact that we were contacted by Ennismore, an international company that takes care of and manages prestigious hotels in several countries, interested in our works to decorate an elegant structure soon to be inaugurated. And finally, to come to the most recent news, we have become a partner of AIPI – Associazione italiana professionisti interior designers. This collaboration opens up so many possibilities, and we are obviously very proud of it.

In short, in just one year, Cinquerosso Arte has already come a long way. What is the next goal? In this year we have laid the foundations, involving many Italian artists and making many contacts. Now we aim to consolidate our brand, to position ourselves as a reliable interlocutor in the architecture and interior design sector. We address ourselves above all to professionals, because we are convinced that works of art represent great added value when designing a particular space. Our mission remains twofold: to foster talent and to bring more and more art into people’s lives. I like the idea of our artworks entering a home, the lobby of a large hotel, the meeting rooms of an office… in short, a lived and frequented place that becomes more alive through art. Not a simple furnished space, but an ecosystem in which functionality and beauty coexist.  

Watch the video!

Riccardo Basaglia

Riccardo Basaglia – Drawing to discover

Art is, for Riccardo Basaglia, a way of discovering new things. His drawings arise from the confluence of themes and cultures, but also of techniques and tools. His is a curious and open mind, as well as a creative one. The result is rich works, almost explosive in their vitality.

Riccardo, tell us about your training. How did you approach art?

I am completely self-taught and I have not received any art education since middle school. Until then I had attended steinerian schools, where children are very stimulated to express themselves artistically, but with the transition to high school I went on alone. I never had anyone to guide or advise me. All the techniques I use, for example, I learnt from online tutorials. At first I used watercolours and my subjects were mainly landscapes and natural elements, then I moved towards acrylics, which have a more powerful impact on the paper, and I ended up mixing both techniques.

In the training of an artist, culture and sources of inspiration count even before techniques. What are yours?

I have never lacked sources of inspiration, fortunately. Initially, I was mainly inspired by nature, as I said, while later I developed a growing interest in technology. Coming from a Steinerian school, it was a kind of revelation for me that came in high school: I had never seen an electronic blackboard, for example! This advent of technology in my life has had an effect on my drawings. As with the techniques, in the case of the subjects I tried to combine two different areas: naturalistic contexts and technological elements. There is a bit of a tendency to divide the so-called ‘manual’ works and those obtained with technological aids. Instead, I try to bring everything together, particularly with the work I am working on these days. I drew a natural landscape, then I scanned it and added digital files: an operation only possible by combining the two approaches. The result satisfies me. My goal is to create works of this kind, but in which the technical aspect is not too conspicuous: I want harmonious, pleasant works.

After all, technology is also the fruit of human creativity.

Exactly. On the contrary, today the development of artificial intelligence makes it more and more complicated to understand how much is the direct result of human work and how much is produced by a programme (no longer just by a programme). In my opinion, one should not distinguish so sharply. Artificial intelligence can be used as a tool to bring an idea to fruition, one has to learn how to use it.

Talking of ideas, you draw on a very vast imaginary world…

Japanese culture, which is very interesting precisely because it is so different from ours, had a great influence on me. Here too, I have sought a possibility of encounter, merging elements from different cultures and searching for symbolism akin to western culture. Cyberpunk is inspired precisely by the most developed cities in Asia where, in a futuristic dystopian scenario, the control of technology has gotten out of hand and nature is almost absent. The immersion effect I try to convey with my drawings is aimed at a search for a possible communion between technology and nature that would make sustainable technological development possible in an ideal future. I then discovered that there are several sub-genres of cyberpunk, which amazed me. Here, my drawings are born from discoveries and always push me to discover new things. For example, I am now studying charcoal, something far removed from what I have done so far. It’s curiosity that moves me. I like to know, to learn and to imagine.

Discover Riccardo Basaglia’s artworks!

Marcello Ceccaroli – Hotels open up to the city and art

Dozens of large hotels in Italy bear the signature of Marcello Ceccaroli, a well-known Roman architect who travels the world in search of new suggestions. A sector, that of hôtellerie, which is also changing in the sign of art.

Your studio is specialized in hôtellerie. Could you explain us this choice?

It is a path that began immediately after graduation, in 1994, when I moved to Brianza to work with a company that operated in this sector. These were top-level hotels, almost all five-star. I learnt a lot there, starting from the bottom and working my way up to project management. In 1999 I opened my own studio in Rome, and since then we have realised more than 130 structures, including hotels and restaurants, in Italy.

What is the aspect that fascinates you most about this job?

I ended up in the world of hospitality almost by chance, but I have found it really fascinating. It certainly stimulates me from a professional point of view, because the hôtellerie sector is always expanding and gives a lot of visibility: it’s one thing to create a private home, it’s another thing to put your own signature on the design of a hotel, which is frequented by so many people. Moreover, it’s a world that is constantly evolving, with innovative products that open the way to many challenges. Suffice it to say that in the past my studio only dealt with interiors, whereas today they ask us for a complete design: location, architectural, structural, plant engineering and furniture design. I love my job so much, that I have turned my holidays into an opportunity to learn more and more: I travel with my family to visit the most interesting hotels around the world, so I always keep myself updated and inspired.

What has changed in the sector over the years?

Thirty, thirty-five years ago, the hotel was a closed building, whose business was limited to the clientele. Today, hotels have opened up to the city, they organise and host fashion shows, exhibitions, receptions, events. Hotel restaurants, which were previously disregarded by external customers, are now important meeting points. There is also a change taking place in Italy, which comes last in this: in the past, hotels in our country were almost all run by private individuals, while today large chains are spreading, as is already the case abroad.

You mentioned exhibitions. So there is room for art in hotels?

Yes, certainly. Hotels can host temporary exhibitions in their hall, and this is one of the ways in which art can enter this sector. But there is also room for it in the design phase. For example, we recently built a hotel near Termini Station in Rome, and on this occasion we turned to the well-known sculptor Jago, who created a series of works especially for us. I often include works of art in my projects, because this way the hotel guest can enjoy them during their stay.

In this regard, what do you think of the Cinquerosso Arte project?

I must say that I would love to collaborate. I have seen some really interesting works, and I would like to include pieces in my projects sooner or later because it could be a beautiful combination. When I design a hotel, I take a lot of inspiration from the location: I like to think that I can find artworks that give added value consistent with this inspiration, that give character and recognisability. The hotel has only to gain from being able to display an artistic imprint. When I travel, I am happy when a hotel gives me emotions, and what could be more exciting than art?

We are close to the Salone del Mobile in Milan, a very important event for those in the trade. Will you be there?

We have two projects we would like to exhibit. One will be housed in an experimental stand, while the other is a real hotel room, but I cannot say more because they are surprises reserved for the fair.

Andrea Marchesini

Andrea Marchesini – Art is travelling

A free art, wandering amongst thoughts, moving from elaborated concepts to impalpable sensations. Andrea Marchesini started his journey on a large table covered in paper and is still going “somewhere, nowhere”.

What is the first word that comes to mind thinking of your works?

Honestly, many come to mind, yet the one that condenses them all is “travel”, as a journey within oneself. A journey where the destination is not important, getting there is not important. What matters are the stops. A bit like a caravan in a desert, which benefits from the oases in order to go on forever. All of this functions for the development of a creative thought, which is looking for answers to the questions one has been asking since forever.

This is what painting is to me: the consequence of a thought, a lifestyle, a mirror of the artist himself.

From where does your creative action start?

Mine is a constant “stream of consciousness” like Joyce’s, composed by infinite flashbacks that make images appear to which I try to give sense. My paintings are not traditional paintings, they are creations: there is a lot of colour, a lot of textiles, but also materials like chalk and stucco. The work is done when I find a balance between my inner world and the harmony of shapes, colour and weight of the work. When my works are near the end, yet “something” is still missing, I put them all in a semi-circle in front of the couch in my studio, I sit down and I look at them in silence. I basically familiarize with my own works, until I understand how to complete it in order to find the balance I was mentioning before.

Could you give us an example of how a painting or an artistic project is born?

Let us take for example the series “Frankenstein 2.0”. Those paintings were born from my reflection: humanity, in order to evolve and thus reach the next stage, must de-structure itself – as in a puzzle – and then put together the pieces in a different way. Mary Shelley’s monster was really a positive step towards human evolution, a step higher. This is why to create these pieces I took old works I had left unfinished, I cut out some pieces to which I gave a new shape and I put them back together on a new canvas, to obtain a unicum. The same happens for colours. I use oil, varnishes, and acrylics. Oil and varnish have synthetic bases, while the acrylic is water-based: they are therefore substances that reject each other. And once again I look to harmonize the opposites.

More than painting, I am creating. My disposition is to be against the “single thought” and in favour of individuality and free artistic expression. And one may grasp this also from the environment I work in. my studio is isolated in the middle of wheat fields and vineyards, in absolute tranquillity. Inside, on the contrary, it is a sort of alchemic laboratory, a great chaos where – in order to move – one must open up a way through books, paintings, objects, colours, puppets, masks… this is my shelter, my safety. From being a creative space it transformed into a place, which is a completely different thing. It is my “Somewhere-Nowhere”, which is also the name of the project I am working on at the moment.

What is it about?

“Somewhere-Nowhere” is the title of an exhibition I am preparing for the MA-EC gallery in Milan, which will open to the public in May. For the works I am creating I get my inspiration from my own Neverland, which is “somewhere” yet also “nowhere”.

Would you tell us briefly about your artistic story?

I basically grew up in my mother’s atelier. My education came from life in an art studio rather than from academies. There is an anecdote I love to tell. When my sister and I were around 4 or 5 years old, my mother used to cover up a large table with paper, threw on top of it crayons and felt pens and told us: «Now, have fun! ». So, I spent my days drawing and colouring every centimetre. It is something that influenced my growth, to the point that even today I favour the large. That creative freedom, that infinite space to fill… are still inside me.

Discover Andrea Marchesini’s artworks!

Mauro Sini fotografia

Mauro Sini – Photography to delimit the void

Passionate about architecture, Mauro Sini looks for essential lines, sharp and precise shapes also for his photographs. It is a study of the void, to explore following one’s inner rhythm.

Mauro, how did you meet photography?

I met it relatively late, when I was 34. Before that, being very attracted to architecture I started studying at university, but left soon enough. My love for photography was born when I was a kid, when I had the luck of having access to a very old camera, from around the beginning of the XX century, and that opened a whole world for me. Then that love was abandoned and picked up again when I was 34, when I decided I wanted to be a photographer. In this transition I was helped by my two teachers; one is Flavio Renzetti, sculptor and painter, the other is Massimo Costoli, photographer. Massimo, in particular, opened my mind and changed my way of thinking and watching from a photographic point of view. Anyhow, it is thanks to him that I discovered who the Mauro Sini photographer is. Since then, I have followed a career as a fashion and interior design photographer and on the side I kept up my artistic search.

Architecture is still in your life, though, as many of your subjects are buildings.

Yes, architectural photography is almost a need. I look for lines and sharpness. I often voluntarily exclude the human figure, unless it has a purpose in the context I am portraying. I love to study the space, which is by the way what has always fascinated me in architecture. What I do in my photographs is to attempt to delimit the void, cutting out spaces in an emptiness, from my very personal point of view.

There also might be particular projects, such as Mitoraj, which I realized in Pompei, where the human figure is present, yet sublimated by the statues.

Anyway, my creativity is expressed like this, by taking away from the frame instead of inserting in the frame. Even in landscapes, in fact, I look for lines and essentiality.

Do you use colour as well or it always black and white?

I use colour only when black and white does not enhance the image. And if in black and white I often take advantage of the contrast, with colours I privilege the dark ones, I tend to tone them down. So, in my photography, colour is rare and when it is there, it is dense, never bright.

Actually, the pictures I take when I am at work, are always in colour, and quite often very bright. Black and white is my niche, my refuge, where everything works as I want and I can read in my own rhythm.

What is your method? Do you follow a plan or do you let your inspiration guide you?

Besides some specific projects, such as Mitoraj, I let myself be guided by what I see. Sometimes I go and look for intriguing places. I shoot what I see, and having always travelled for work I find myself often in very inspiring places, where I sometimes go back to take pictures in my own time. Now for instance, I am working on pictures of industrial archaeology realized in a ruin in Argentario, Tuscany, where I have every intention of going back to take pictures of the same places, yet at different times of day. This is a particularly structured project, but often my shots are casual: I walk around and I am struck by a shadow, by a reflections or the light coming through a window.

Discover Mauro Sini’s artworks!

stefanizzi fotografia corpo femminile

Paola Stefanizzi – Women Universe

Professional photographer, specialized in fashion photography, her art undresses the female body and portrays it for its purity.

Paola, tell us about your development as a photographer.

I started in my teen years, while studying at the Istituto d’Arte. After school I used to work as an assistant in a photography studio, trying to “steal” the secrets of the craft. I then attended IED (European Design Institute) in Rome, and for a while I caressed the idea of becoming a professional reporter, but then I realized it was not for me. At the same time I kept working as an assistant in different studios, thus matching my academic learning with actual practice, and I then ended up in Bologna where I have now been managing fashion catalogues for several years. I remember that during my education I loved developing films and printing in black and white, and I spent hours in the dark room experimenting. To me, what happened in there always looked like magic: the photographic film captured what was in the world and it gave it back on paper.

And how was it to pass to digital photography? 

Obviously everything is very different. For work, I use a lot of post-production programs, that allow one to achieve in a very short time what used to take days of work before. Without considering that before we had very few shots at our disposal, whereas today they are unlimited. Coming from an analogic school, I try to shoot as little as possible, because it is difficult for me to choose amongst many versions of the same image. And for the shots I take for me, for my creativity I do not do post-production hardly at all. Usually, the only modification is to change the picture to black and white

So, tell us about your art.

During the years I have experimented many themes, but nowadays I am focused on the representation of the female body. Images of women, often in black and white, with accentuated contrasts and many shadows. The face is not always visible, because what interests me is the relationship between the body and the environment. Furthermore I like to work with movement and textiles to create compositions. 

I often exhibit my photos in exhibitions connected to particular days or themes, like International Women’s Day or the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, sometimes collaborating with public authorities. 

Who are the women you portray?

Sometimes I photograph models, but more often I picture people close to me. I also take pictures of myself because it is easier and more immediate. Obviously the emotional commitment is different, because as the subject portrayed I feel emotions I would like to convey to the viewer; I like to think that the emotions I feel may reach those who see the photo. But what is important to me is the story of the female figure, something that goes beyond the person.

Discover Paola Stefanizzi’s artworks!

arte e interior design

Chiara Castelli – An Art Culture is needed, also for Interior Design

Architect and designer, Chiara Castelli loves to have trusting and intimate relationships with her clients. Listening and experience are therefore essential requisites for a furnishing with a distinctive personality.

Chiara, would you describe your job? 

I can tell you I am in love with my job. My spare time is always dedicated to the hunt for objects, materials, ideas. I graduated in Architecture at the Politecnico in Milan, but I mainly work as an interior architect; having been born into a family of furniture manufacturers I have always been into Interior Design. I am a bit of an atypical architect, in fact, I have a furniture shop where I sell both furniture that I designed, or unique or rare pieces, not mass-produced. My philosophy is no logo. My clients are not looking for the brand, they are looking for something distinctive, which has my touch or has been carefully selected by me. I follow my client in every aspect of the project, from the organization of the spaces to the choice of fabrics and furnishing items.

In my projects I usually tend towards warm colours,  and I give much importance to the materials; I use a great deal of oxidized metals. I try to be in accord with the ongoing fashion, but I am quite eclectic so I prefer mixing modern and antique pieces of furnishing. As a general idea, I get my inspiration from the French decorative style, I am not “clean and dry”, but when I design my pieces I usually go for simple essential lines. 

Which is your favourite part of a project? 

I must admit I love the relationship that arises with my clients. I step into people’s lives, into their homes, in a very intimate way. I discover how people live, what are the habits of the families, and I often find myself in the position of helping them by listening to them. In time I learned that listening, and learning how to go around some personal dynamics, as for example between husband and wife, helps me in offering the best ideas. I love this aspect of my job because I receive both new couples, just about to go live together, as well as older couples with different needs and attitudes. And it is an honour to enter their spaces. The real challenge is understanding what the person in front of me wants and trying to filter that through my ideas: I do not believe the client is always right and I will not support their ideas if I see faults in them. 

What role does Art have in your job?  And what do you think of Cinquerosso Arte?

I believe works of art are very important and more in general whatever goes on the walls, for a very simple reason: the first thing people get wrong when they want to renovate the interior design are the paintings. Some clients are passionate about art and maybe want to build their re-furnishing ideas around the paintings, but in the majority of cases people do not have an artistic sensitivity. Thus, for an interior designer, the difficulty consists in the conjugation of the personal taste with the need of not ruining the whole project with horrible paintings hanging on the walls.

This is also why I find the Cinquerosso Arte’s project quite interesting, because it offers me and my colleagues quality works which also have accessible prices. 

Of course I see some difficulties as well, because it is not easy to make art understood through the digital channel, which adds to the lack of a real and proper culture which allows the recognition of beauty. This must be built.

Silvia Lisotti – Photography is my second life

Traveller and photographer, passionate and curious, Silvia Lisotti was brought to art not by choice, but because her talent manifested itself in all its bursting evidence.

Silvia, tell us about you. How and when did you start to photograph? 

I am a great traveller, every year I leave for two or three important trips, since I was in my thirties. And I have always been interested in photography which allowed me to document these travels. Then at some point, around my forties, I decided to send these reportages to some specialized magazines. And to my great surprise I was contacted by several editorials, and therefore I started publishing my shots. With my new incomes I treated myself to a professional Reflex. And at forty-five I told myself: «It is never too late!», and I attended the Scuola Romana di Fotografia, a very prestigious photography professional school  in Rome, where in two years I perfected  the technical aspects, including the ones for developing and printing in BW, and above all where I studied in depth the photographic culture. Today, I just finished my online studies at the NFT Artist University by Luca Vehr.

So this is no longer just a hobby.

No, it was something more significant. I started to participate in different prestigious competitions, amongst others the IPA Awards and I won a prize. So I started to believe in myself and once again I told myself: “If I am receiving these awards, I might actually have talent».

At the beginning I was fascinated by technology (cameras, lenses) then I realized – after having acquired the experience – that that is not the most important aspect: what really is important is the inner vision, the intuition, the idea, the innovation. To see, to know, to study. Photography is a way of life, like Cartier-Bresson used to say. I buy Fine Art photography books, I go to exhibitions, I observe the shots taken by others. Among the artists I love the most and from whom I get my inspiration are Luigi Ghirri and Harold Feinstein, the first one for my minimal landscape shots and the second one for my flower still-lifes.

What is your portfolio composed of? 

I dedicated myself to photography of landscapes and portraits. And during lockdown, I decided to take the leap into still-life and Fine Art. 

In fact, this is a very complex photography, where not only one has to master the technique of the shot and the post-production, but also try to transform the work into a message, a communication, into an emotion. And here again, I went to study at the Fine Art Photo Academy.

And once again, in an unexpected way I found myself doing exhibitions and having my shots hung in museums (Polo Museale di Lanciano, Stadio di Domiziano for the XIV Biennale d’Arte di Roma, Palazzo Velli in Trastevere with the Biennale Internazionale di Arte e Cultura della città di Roma) and galleries both in Italy and abroad (Berlin). 

And now you are part of the Cinquerosso Arte project.

Yes. I feel this very close, because my photography is in part destined to the authorial market, but most of all it is connected to interior design; I love translating my works in Fine Art prints and making them actual objects for interior design. And even in this field I have received awards which I very much appreciated. For example the Dharma Luxury Hotel in Rome has recently bought six of my works for its luxury corridors. All in all, photography gives me great satisfactions, especially considering the fact that I never left my regular job for a company, and therefore do not give it all my time. I started to engage with photography as an adult and I practice it in parallel with other things, so I guess it is safe to say that it is my second life.

Discover Silvia Lisotti’s artworks!

art city white night

Art City White Night

During the Art City White Night, an event of  Arte Fiera 2023, the “Cinquerosso Arte, la piattaforma dei giovani artisti” event will take place, a collective exhibition of the collection of Cinquerosso Arte.

In this occasion, the location in via Remorsella 5/2, in Bologna, will be open to public from 8 pm to 12 pm.

“During Arte Fiera Bologna 2022 – said Francesca Fazioli, founder of Cinquerosso Arte – we officially launched our project, with the go live of the e-commerce platform for accessible art.

Today, less than a year later, we are proudly part of the Arte Fiera 2023, the great event dedicated to contemporary art and which attracts to Bologna artists, professionals and those passionate about art from all over the world.

From the launch of our website, in May 2022, we have come a long way. More and more artists have decided to join us, we have wonderful relations with well-known interior designers worldwide, and we are today participating in one of the most important kermess dedicated to art in Italy. Arte Fiera Bologna, besides the actual fair, also nourishes many initiatives which allow us to broaden our horizons on creativity.”

The White Night of Arte Fiera 2023

Art City White Night will animate Bologna’s Saturday night, right after the closing of the fair. As always, this edition too will be characterized by performances, happenings, exhibitions and all sorts of appointments, hosted in public and private spaces, from galleries, to shops, to restaurants. During Arte Fiera, in fact, the whole city is animated by events and initiatives which involve citizens, institutions, and all those passionate about art who come to Bologna for this occasion. The fair will be from the 3rd to the 5th of February, but from the 27th January all the events of the Art Week will start to take place; and last, the night of the 4th of February, Art City White Night will celebrate these intense days dedicated to art and culture. The event “Cinquerosso Arte, la piattaforma dei giovani artisti” is therefore inserted in a very exciting context, bringing the spotlight onto its many talents.

Franco Covi Fotografia

Exploring with photography – Interview with Franco Covi

Professional photographer for more than thirty years, Franco Covi is always looking for new languages and new means of expression, from film to artificial intelligence.

Franco, tell us about yourself.

I started doing this job very young. First as an assistant, and then, at 21 with my own business. Actually my first camera was given to me as a present when I was 6, so it is safe to say I started fifty years ago.

As a photographer, I obviously dedicate myself to several different projects, but in a more personal artistic sense of the job I am very much still interested in the human body.

I also started, ten years ago, to create videos, to experiment. Videos that have dancers as protagonists. Today I define myself as a photographer and a video maker.

Also in your photos the protagonists come from the dance world, don’t they?

Yes, and for a while now. I find dancers much more interesting than models, because they know how to express, with their bodies, what I have in mind. I describe a situation, a concept, and they interpret it very easily because they are used to telling stories with their bodies. Very often they are female dancers, but it depends on what I want to portray with the image. For example when I decided to portray a body in a very wild and rocky landscape, I chose the body of a male dancer.

What inspires you? How are your pictures born?

It might seem strange, almost mystical, but very often I have some sort of vision, like a dream. I have something in mind, a photo, and then I see it, as in a daydream. I see the photo already printed. Very often it happens to me, that images come, and I find myself going through them like a photo album. Then, when I actually realize it, changes might occur, even together with the people being shot who – as I said – are often dancers. It is never a solo, it is a dialogue. I often use black and white but it is not a diktat. I start from the image and then sometimes I decide later on if I want to finish it in color or in black and white. In the end, today’s technology allows this and I have always been a fan of new technologies.

What are you working on now?

In this moment, I am studying the applications of artificial intelligence that allow the generation of images starting from a series of words, from a description. Many might turn up their noses, but I find this actually quite interesting. This is also a way of telling something through images. I am now in the process of understanding whether I can combine photography with these techniques, if there is a path that can be followed and also be artistically interesting.

If I had to define my photography with a word, I would say it is explorative. Both because I like to explore new techniques, and because when I “receive” my images, I explore, I investigate, what my mind is able to propose. So every time is a sort of research in the meanders of the mind, on the threshold between sleep and waking. And then, I re-create my dream.

Discover Franco Covi’s artworks!

Maison&Objet

Cinquerosso Arte exhibits at Maison&Objet, the interior design fair

From the 19th to the 23rd of January, Cinquerosso Arte will be in Paris to participate at Maison&Objet!

Sector “Today”, Hall 6 – Stand K49

Maison&Object is one of the most important events worldwide dedicated to interior design and furniture. The fair takes place twice a year, in January and September, in Paris, and attracts thousands and thousands of professionals of design from many countries. Many products are exhibited, from large furniture to tiny objects, many ideas on contemporary interior design, many occasions to connect and exchange.

The participation in Maison&Objet is therefore an event rich in potential for Cinquerosso Arte, which will be able to present its project of affordable art for interior design to a vast audience of architects, designers and general contractors.

This year’s theme is “Take Care!”. Taking care of oneself, each other, and the planet, is therefore the concept – the value – around which the entire organization of the fair moves. Take Care!, in this case, is intended as a focusing, a re-connecting oneself to reality and action. This concept covers a broad spectrum of choices, from the shape of a piece of furniture to ecological materials to reduce the environmental impact of furnishings.

Cinquerosso Arte takes to this space its own idea of beauty, art as a gift capable of making people’s lives better. From contractors to designers, everybody can benefit from a selection of artists making quality works of art available, with a wide variety of styles, techniques, colours and atmospheres.

Where to find us at Maison&Objet

The stand of Cinquerosso Arte is in Sector “Today”, Hall 6 – Stand K49.

For appointments you may use the usual contacts or fill the form on the website of Maison&Objet https://www.maison-objet.com/en/paris/exhibitors/cinquerosso-arte-today.

Cinquerosso Arte will be waiting for you in Paris!

Carolaelupo artista astrattismo

Art to me is gratitude – interview with Carolaelupo

A vital painting, made up of energetic gestures and colors that brush away the grey. This is the art of Carolaelupo.

Carola, when did you discover art?

When I was a little girl. I used to live in a small village where it rained often, in every season. And I loved to draw in that childhood time that goes by slowly, while outside the rain was pouring down, thunder and lightning and black skies. Drawing was that alive spirit that allowed me to go through those times, it made it creative, enriched it with colors. Living in a small town, the days were not packed with activities like the ones of the children today, especially those living in the city.

And today?

My approach with art remains the same as I had as a child: it is what puts me in contact with what I have inside, and takes me to a different space and time dimension. In this sense, the 70 days of lockdown have been very significant. I drew a lot, drawings full of energy and made with a lot of energy. So, while many suffered from isolation, boredom, and the jobs that used to fill up their days, I was aware of having an inestimable richness.

The titles of your works are very evocative. How do you choose them?

There is no fixed rule. I often draw with an intention and the title is basically the idea I have in mind. I think of the sun, I have the intention of connecting to that force, that energy, that symbol. Other times I just draw and then ask myself what that work means to me.

Tell us about your pseudonym, Carolaelupo. Where does it come from?

Lupo was a great love and a great gift. Sometimes life gives us the gift of meeting someone – it might be a friend, a lover, or an animal – who reveals to us a greater love. And this love is still in me, and will be until the day I die. Lupo was a dog that was too big to be a dog. Not only, he always wanted to be with you to show you his love, but also do with you whatever you were doing. It was something visible and evident. This is why I say he was too big to be a dog. My name Carolaelupo was born in 2012. I was drawing between his constant interfering, until that day, which I remember as if it was today, I looked him in the eye and I said to him “ Lupo, I understand. These drawings belong to both of us. From now on I will sign them Carolaelupo.”

Discover the artworks by Carolaelupo

Riccardo Passerini Fotografia di viaggio

Riccardo Passerini – Around the world with a camera

Traveling for work, Riccardo always has with him his camera in order to be ready to photograph a face, a site, a detail capable of rendering the essence of a place.

Riccardo, tell us about your training as a photographer.

Initially I used to do fashion photography, and it was in that field that I was formed and started working. So we are talking about pictures with publicity and commercial applications. The most personal part of my production, which I entrusted to Cinquerosso Arte,  is on the other hand travel photography. Some of the shots on the website, for example, were taken in Marrakech, where I traveled for a shooting. I like taking pictures of places, and especially of people, capturing in an image, their habits, and their way of living, which is different from country to country.

What do you like most about the job as a fashion photographer and that of travel photography? 

Of travel photography, as I said, I like the idea of the story of the places told though the people. I love Cartier-Bresson, and he is my inspiration in a way. I shoot landscapes, too, but I believe the human element is always the most interesting. Of my work as a fashion photographer, on the other hand, I like making editorials for magazines. There I can free my creativity: the magazine sets a very general theme, or even gives me complete freedom for the contents, and the team, guided by the stylist, creates a story with a character and a setting. 

Among the photographs you shot, is there one you love in particular? 

I’d say Il volo,  which represents a clochard amongst pigeons flying. I was in Paris for a workshop and I was walking during my lunch break with a colleague, close to the Centre Pompidou. I had a sandwich in my hand. This homeless person was sleeping, and suddenly got up and made a gesture to throw some bread, or something like that. And I started shooting pictures, sandwich in my hand,  because I knew that something interesting was about to happen. I like the happy and serene expression of the clochard: I believe I caught a small instant of absolute happiness.   

Discover Riccardo Passerini’s artworks!

nft arte digitale

NFT, the future of art? A new opportunity to grasp?

Art has never been closed in an ivory tower separated from reality, so it should not come as a surprise that its market might undergo variations especially when a big part of reality will reside in the digital world, i.e. the metaverse, which is talked about a great deal these days. 

Considering the infinite contents that go around the web, it is quite evident that some of them might be of artistic nature. Through NFT, works of art can go around in the digital world from a seller to a buyer and NFT themselves are a guarantee tool which proves with absolute certainty who the owner of the digital work of art is.

The acronym Non-Fungibile Token refers to an ownership certificate of a digital content. 

Let us think of a photograph. Being in digital form, if the photographer publishes it on the internet, it can be endlessly reproduced, and everybody can use it as they want. If it is used improperly or in an unacceptable way, one may ask for the shot to be removed. In some cases one must pay to download it in high resolution or to use it for commercial aims, but this does not make you the owner of the photograph, it just gives you permission to use it. 

The photographer may transform the picture in an NFT, which is a sort of univocal code which identifies the work. Who buys this NFT becomes the exclusive owner of the image, and is therefore  allowed to sell it again.

In actual fact, as there are no laws regulating this kind of commerce, it is quite difficult to understand how the buyer is able to protect and assert ownership. Still, the fact is that many people have already invested in NFT. It is interesting to note that in some cases it is not about works of art, yet more of “single pieces” like the first Tweet of the first ever SMS: they have been associated to an NFT and these NFT have been sold, and whoever bought them became owner of something that does not really exist, in a concrete way, which one can never “hang in the living-room” and that is endlessly reproduced on several web pages.

On the other hand, NFT of works of art digitally created could be generated, works of which no material copy has been printed. 

Beyond financial and legal dynamics, philosophical implications and moral judgements, it is interesting to know that the NFT system might actually allow artists to protect their art and guarantee an economical gain. The question is: will this be a stimulus to imagine new forms of art? At Cinquerosso Arte we hope so, because we dream of a world where creative people can express themselves and live from their work, and that their work helps to make people’s lives better.

arte architettura

Art and Architecture, twin arts – Interview with Max Martelli

Architecture is not only building, just like art is not only “museum stuff”. These two expressions of human creativity have always been intrinsically connected. We talk about this with the art historian Max Martelli.

Max, tell us briefly about the relationship between art and architecture in history.

This is obviously a very broad subject, but I will try and summarize it, starting with an example which I believe might have some common ground with the Cinquerosso Arte project. You offer consultancies to help architects integrate works of art in their projects, and this means that the work of art does not arrive last, to fill a void, it is part of the very idea of the space.

And of this deep interpenetration we have many examples coming from the past. Let us think about painters in Pompeii, who used to paint the houses creating the illusion of architectural space. Painting was not intended only to create simple decorations, it simulated architectural structures, thus modifying the perception of the spaces.

We find this kind of relation in later historical moments, too. After the long Byzantine period, where space and time disappeared in favour of icons, which could be considered as virtual prayers, Giotto comes along. I quote here the Presepe di Greccio, in Assisi, that shows us a scene happening beyond iconostasis. Giotto, in this work, takes us to the presbytery and shows us the back of the crucifix. He thus shows us an architectural space, three-dimensional, which would be otherwise hidden to the viewer. From Byzantine metaphysics we shift to a physical space.

From Giotto onwards, the space goes back to being depicted and, alongside this, the relationship between painting and architecture comes back to life. Let us think of Masaccio, who in the Trinity in Santa Maria Novella in Florence, shows us a body with almost an architectural perspective,  contained in a foreshortened archway. I would also like to recall Antonello da Messina, in his Annunciata, paradoxically here architecture is not depicted yet felt: this work includes us, the viewer occupies the space where the angel is situated. 

In the Renaissance we then have the figure of the painter-architect – Michelangelo, Bernini, Raffaello, Bramante – who was openly inspired by Roman art. In this period a technique called “quadrature” is re-discovered, which basically means to simulate architectures in which frescoes can be inserted. The Galleria Farnese by Annibale Carracci is all built around this system. It is interesting what happens during the second half of the 1400’s in the Veneto region, around Padova and Venezia, in the relationship between frame and painting. Let us think of Mantegna in the Pala di San Zeno di Verona, who inserts painting in a monumental frame: it is not therefore simply a container, but a proper architecture where characters are put on the scene. This subject is inherited by Bellini,  who in several works replicates this approach with a strong architectural frame. He goes a step forward though and frees the characters from the architectural frame in order to make them independent, but the frame goes from being physical to being painted. In the Incoronazione della Vergine, currently in the Musei Civici di Pesaro, the frame is within a frame. Christ is represented in a wooden frame,  sitting on the throne with Mary, and the back of the throne is itself a frame enclosing the representation of a landscape. It is an extraordinarily modern work of incredible impact, which I would define as revolutionary. 

Are there any examples in the plastic arts? 

Yes, several.  There is one that seems to be particularly interesting, which is the Altare del Santo di Donatello, in Padova. It is a group of bronze statues with Mary and the Child in the centre, with some bas-relief tiles around them. These works were elaborated by Donatello (who had an architect mentality) for the inside of a specific structure, of which today we know nothing. To have lost this context hinders us from appreciating this work completely, because something is missing. So this is a clear example of a very tight relationship between art and architecture, which we recognize because of its absence. By the way, the altarpiece by Mantegna, aforementioned, which was created a few years later is considered a possible hypothetical model of reference for the virtual reconstruction of the Altare di Padova,  as it seems that Mantegna took inspiration from it. 

What about nowadays, where can we see art interact with architecture? 

In more recent years, we may think of Art Nouveau and Art déco, where paintings were inserted into architectural elements. Nowadays we can think of street art: real artists realize works using parts of buildings and transfiguring them. A pipe, for example, becomes the stem of a flower and acquires, thanks to art, a new raison d’être. 

What do you think of the Cinquerosso Arte project?

I just recently met Cinquerosso and what struck me was the ability to design, rather like the artists of the past we just mentioned,  décor solutions through the integration of works of art with interior design and architecture of the spaces that the client wishes to personalize and therefore make unique and recognizable. It is a way of letting the spaces “speak”, to let them immediately convey the philosophy of a firm or a professional. The impact of the right piece of art, even if in the waiting room of a professional studio, is slightly underestimated,  but slowly its importance in communication is being discovered, the ability of works of art to strike its viewers. The right painting, put in the right place,  might become part of the success of a firm, or at least of its image in the face of the public.

I believe Cinquerosso has understood these potentials and decided to extend its offer by cultivating, in a modality which is up to date, the ancient relation between art and architecture. And this is also connected in a positive way to the project of Cinquerosso Arte,  which allows young artists and their works to be promoted and introduced from the beginning in a professional circuit,  thus leading them to potential clients. Many artists, or wannabes, might see this multiplication process of their creations, and their introduction in interior design, as a degrading factor of their creativity, but it is not like that. Suffice to think of what we just discussed about the ancient relationship between art and architecture. 

Pierluigi Molteni architetto Bologna

Pierluigi Molteni – A work of art is a guest of honour

The architect Pierluigi Molteni virtually opens to us the doors o his studio to offer us his very interesting point of view on the relationship between architecture, art and people.

What are the main characteristics of your projects? 

My studio basically follows two kinds of projects, residential and temporary installations. For the residential one, we dedicate a lot of attention to how lifestyles change in time and therefore how people living there change, too. Ours is never a pure and simple style proposal, we try our best to understand how the spaces will be used by our clients. Our job is first of all about listening and attention. Then we support our client from the concept to the finishing of the interior décor, going through the executive designs, the site management, the choice of materials and the finishing: they are all aspects that cannot develop separately.

The second area is temporary installations, which divide into two sections. On one hand we curate the installations of some important Italian and international firms in the ceramic sector, on the other hand we curate museums’ and artistic settings.  The last project realized was that for the exhibition “Giulio II e Raffaello, una nuova stagione del Rinascimento a Bologna”, (Giulio II and Raffaello, a new season of the Renaissance in Bologna) at the Pinacoteca Nazionale in Bologna, which will be open until the 5th February 2023.

Both these areas, residential and temporary installations, are to me strongly connected by a common factor. My studio starts from the experience of the space, i.e. how people live and perceive the spatial qualities of a specific area, how it sounds and reacts to light. Whether they are living spaces or for an exhibition, we build the project in order for them to be welcoming, interesting and inviting to discovery. As I said, we put at the heart the building of a genuine experience of sense and sensibility.

So art has a very important role in your work.

In my job and in my life, because I am a ‘compulsive’ exhibitions visitor. If I go to visit a city, I also go for the exhibitions. Because of my job I also meet clients with very important private collections. In these cases, we operate to create the right conditions to host and enhance the works’ characteristics. A piece of art affects the space and interacts with it. One must always read and interpret its potential.

So this is also an experience? 

Yes, because elements of surprise, estrangement and involvement must be cultivated. With a work of art an intimate relationship is always established, so the conditions to emphasize it must be built. In the Renaissance exhibition, for example, the visitor discovers the most important piece (i.e. the portrait of Giulio II painted by Raffaello) following a path of discovery. In the same way, in the houses, these pieces of art are so significantly charged that they deserve a focused study in order to enhance them as much as possible. A work of art is like a beloved one coming to live with us: it has a life of its own and we need to position so that it can express everything it has to say, and give.

What do you think of the Cinquerosso Arte project?

It seems to be a very sensible project. I believe art galleries should be re-designed. They only work if they encourage and facilitate the relationship between collector and artist, thus nurturing the communities of those who are passionate about art. Otherwise they are mere shops like any other, and the magic of art is lost.

Cinquerosso Arte is in some ways a community, a virtual community, which can nurture the necessities of Art. To this, one must add accessibility. Once the concept of art’s reproducibility was cleared (Walter Benjamin talked about this at the beginning of the XX century), we know that a multiple has the same characteristics as the original, in terms of fruition, pleasantness and the ability to talk to us and move us. The work of art maintains its value for its intrinsic beauty and because it is tied to an author, an artist, but the reproducibility allows the cost to be reduced. This is the strength of the project Cinquerosso Arte.

opere digital art

Leandro Faina – Art is something that happens

Always bearer of an aesthetic vision of things, Leandro expresses his inner landscapes through art. Surprisingly peaceful worlds where each of us would love to live. 

Leandro, tell us your story. At least as far as art is concerned.

More than a story, it is my way of being. I have always had a mental predisposition that leads me to think and re-think how things can change, which is the drive for any creative process. I always had an aesthetic opinion, also because my father is a painter therefore I breathed and absorbed art from a very young age. For many years I dedicated myself to graffiti, and this was crucial to my professional path as a graphic designer. Graffiti painting requires sensitivity in looking for the order, in finding the distribution of the weights, which is very useful in my job. I do graphic design, illustration and animation for communication and publishing, and here I can exploit this kind of skill. In parallel, I have continued to nurture my artistic side, which is of a very different nature.

Which are the differences?

Whoever works as a graphic designer, for instance for a communication agency, should not have one’s own style. In this field one needs to recount something that must be coherent with the visual identity of the client, creating a system of symbols, traits and metaphors capable of transmitting their values.

Art, on the other hand, allows one to express one’s own style, and this makes every artistic voice unique. In my case, art allows me to set my sensitivity free to emerge, tapping into my less logical and rational side. In my works I express thoughts and feelings, with a mental process completely different from the one I apply to my job as a graphic designer or illustrator. I don’t follow a project, I try to tell something which is difficult to define with words, and that often does not have a univocal meaning.

So how is your art born? 

Let us say it comes to me. Somehow the image appears to me, as if I were able to touch it, and I recreate it. Of course, I later add details and work on the colours, but the subject and its story is proposed to me in an almost automatic way.

A recurring image in your work is the dachshund. Why? 

It is an important part of my life; its presence symbolizes our connection. To me a dog is a sure place in the world, far from any menace. There is a simplicity to it which makes it very honest and sincere, pure. The presence of my dog in my vision is a sort of contact with this dimension, faraway from all the wrongful dynamics of this world. Curiously my illustrations seem to express a personality quite different from my own, probably because they tap into something very profound. 

Are you working on anything in particular at the moment? 

To be honest I never have real plans. I work on something new when I feel the moment is right. I don’t “look” for an idea. I might have more or less productive periods, but not because of my clear decision. In the end, I have the opportunity to express myself in different ways: right now, aside from my job as a graphic designer, illustrator and animator, I created a clothing brand and I manage the artistic direction. I mean, I am lucky to be able to put my imagination to good use.

Discover the artworks by Leandro Faina

consulenza opere arte interior designer

Cinquerosso Arte Advice Service

Have you ever entered a room and felt a sensation of harmony, as if everything was in place? 

This is what happens when the location owns its style, a coherence between the elements which does not allow space for dissonance. Before observing every piece, composing the overall décor, individually, one feels the pleasure of being in a clean space, ruled by one principle. 

This is what the advice service offered by Cinquerosso Arte is all about, it helps to determine the most coherent piece of art that could be added to the space. 

Many businesses, professionals and contractors seek advice from Cinquerosso Arte, and its staff collects and examines the information about a project – might be the décor of a small shop, or the design of a firm’s headquarters, or the hall of a hotel. Once the brand identity is known, the works of art will need to be coherent with the firm’s image and the guidelines of its communication. An advice service is also offered to professionals, such as architects or interior designers, who may be supported by Cinquerosso Arte from the very beginning of the idea. This is how the final project will be complete and coherent in every detail.

The staff studies the style, the needs and the destination of the spaces, and advises the best works of art accordingly. It is not only about balancing shapes, sizes, colours and shades. Style is something more complex, connected to both values and vision. A piece of art is not just there to fill up the void, it transmits a message, it speaks for the firm and the people.

Finally, the advice service is available also privately. Again, the style and the personality of the client are taken into consideration, because every artist expresses a personal vision of the world and it is wonderful when this matches the client’s choice.

Please contact us for any further information, we will be delighted to support you in the search for the right art work for you.

Discover more about our Art Advice Service!

fotografia bensi essenziale minimalista

Lorenzo Bensi – A stroll in the essential

Lorenzo’s photography goes straight to the heart. Shots that depict the purity of shapes and enchant the viewers as visual poems. 

Tell us how you started. When was your first encounter with photography? 

I am the son of artists, my father was a wedding photographer. So at home, I had access to a lot of equipment. But it was only towards the end of my studies, about ten years ago, that I really started to experiment with film. I am self-taught, basically. I started to explore various genres and I learnt the basis of photography along with developing the films. I studied the great masters, trying to understand their techniques and their point of view, to then find my own way.

And what did you find along your way?

There is a very essential kind of photography, minimalist, which many have described as “silent” and poetic. It is essential, starting with the subjects: every shot contains very few elements, which I then try to highlight in the best way. 

And along my way, there are mostly landscapes. Most of them are natural, but also industrial and urban.  They all share the extreme cleanliness and essentiality of the shapes.

I rarely use colours, in order not to distract the focus from the shape, and when I do use it I concentrate on the colour itself, and on the chromatic contrasts of the scene. To the point that sometimes the photograph is no longer recognizable and it almost looks like an abstract work.

Your photos are very poetic, as we said, and often your titles contribute to this. How do you choose them? 

It is true, also titles have a role in my photography. Sometimes they are quite descriptive, more often they offer a key for the interpretation of the image. Sometimes I give to my shots the title of a song, or a piece of one, other times the shot inspires my words. Anyhow, it is something very instinctive, not premeditated.

In this regard, how much instinct is there in your photography? How important is the post-production for example?

Imagining a continuum that goes from the snap-shot to a post-productive work that completely modifies the original, I guess I could be placed in the middle. Post-production is surely fundamental for the minimalism I was talking about. Everything depends on the conditions of the shot. If the scene is already clean and essential at the origin, then the finishing touch is basically the conversion to black and white. Other times one must work with one’s imagination and intervene in a more decisive way to obtain an expressive image. 

What are you currently working on? 

I am focusing on a quite complex project about trees and climate change. I am not shooting much, because I am studying environments, microclimates, and species. I am not sure how long this will take but I have faith that something very interesting will come from it. 

Discover the artworks by Lorenzo Bensi

Silvia Pesci - Damiani Editore

Silvia Pesci – New talents deserve space

Owner of Damiani publishing house, Silvia Pesci is a great expert of photography and contemporary art, with an international perspective. And in between her worldwide travels she assisted with the birth of Cinquerosso Arte.

Silvia, what is happening in Damiani?

Many very interesting things. We are an Art Publishing House, with a particular vocation for current events photography. During these last years we have followed closely the events that took place in the United States, the human rights movement and the civil rights movement. This is our vocation, although we are based in Italy we are an international publishing house, to the extent that we do not publish books in Italian and most of our work is developed abroad.

Tell us about your story.

We were born in 2004, with a first book dedicated to an Italian author, and we immediately understood that the essential requirement for a publishing house to survive, was distribution. It sounds trivial, yet it is not: books must get to bookshops, and it is not an easy process. So we created a few very important projects, quite hazardous too, for the United States, with the aim of qualifying to work with the most important art book distributor in that field, which is Artbook. So we arrived in bookstores,  concept stores, museum bookshops and digital platforms in the whole of the United States. 

Further on we started collaborating with the most important distributor worldwide,  Thames&Hudson, which distributes us in every country except the States, where we are still working with  Artbook.

Most of our work, including the selection of artists and the management of contracts, is done in our offices in the States. The most energetic, lively and brilliant field is in New York, where we have an office and we go several times a year to meet with artists.

The Italian market for art books is actually quite discouraging. That is why we opted only for an online space, through our website: www.damianieditore.com

Why do you think this is?

In Italy, there are great publishing houses which draw from our very rich artistic heritage. But we chose a different road, focusing on photography and contemporary art, and it must be said, whatever happens in these fields, usually takes place abroad. When we organize presentations of our books in New York, for instance, there is a line at the entrance because everybody wants their copy signed by the author, whereas in Italy, very few people participate. The Italian market is still small and has few resources.

You were one of the first ones to know about the project Cinquerosso Arte. What do you think about it?

I believe it is a beautiful project. Of course, it is not an easy task and it demands a lot of commitment to obtain visibility. But Italy is full of young artists, especially very talented young photographers, who deserve to be known and commercialized. The market dynamics do not always do justice to the real beauty of a work. My best wishes go to Cinquerosso Arte, for their success in giving these talents the chance of being appreciated.

Bad Mandala – “My goal? Make people smile”

Eclectic, curious, experimenter, Luca Gentile AKA Bad Mandala never stops. His mind, just like his work, is a web of ideas, languages, images, sensory trails that never exhaust their energy.

Luca, tell us about your education

I have always been passionate about comic books and cartoons and I started to draw when I was a child. When I reached my teen years, I met hip-hop, graffiti and street art. I travelled across Europe and took part in various events related to these fields, and also lived for a while in Berlin and London. I then studied to become a graphic designer, and the combination of the two worlds came quite naturally: on the one hand what I had learned in the streets, and on the other what my professional occupation was, i.e. web design, graphic design, branding, covers and so on. So the project Bad Mandala was born: I combined the most playful aspect with the most rigorous one, to reach computer art.

Why did you choose this name? 

Because in my work, like in mandalas, I pay a lot of attention to detail. I love this practice that requires meticulousness and time to draw very small and very precise things. This leads to a sort of meditative state that allows you to go beyond, and to draw things you were not even aware belonged to you. My pieces are often complex freestyle works with no plan, whatever happens, happens.

What was the evolution of Bad Mandala’s work? 

I started to draw, with a BIC pen, very large drawings. A very meticulous process involving a lot of commitment. Then I started to simplify it, and make the process cleaner and more natural. I also tried painting, sculpture, paper crafting, engraving. What drives my creativity is following what I like. Some artists focus on the same thing for years, whereas I love change and transformation, blending all the aspects of my life. For example, at the moment, I am working a lot with paper, with 3-D art and sculpture. I love imagining in 3-D. The mask series, for instance, was realized with the sponge used to build floral compositions: I carved the shapes with a very particular technique and then I photographed them. Although they required weeks of work, I wanted them to be light funny works. My aim is always to make people smile.

Your work in very heterogeneous, could you choose one piece and tell us how it was born? We would like to understand how you work.

Let us take for example Mandala Hip Hop. As shape and execution, it is simpler than others, because it is less detailed, but it gives the idea of my technique and my world. I started in the centre and then slowly I created the slice. Then with the computer, I made replicas of the slice to cover the whole surface and I adjusted the margins. If one looks closely it is possible to spot many elements drawn from hip-hop, like rollers, shoes, microphones, sprays, all connected by cables and geometrical shapes. It almost looks like it is composed by computer icons. The effect I tried to obtain was a geometrical ensemble if looked at from afar, but when one moves closer, one discovers all the tiny details that compose and tell its story.

And what are you currently working on? In this moment, I am focusing on electronic music and video-clips, with a friend. I take clips, scenes, green screen bits from the web and realize videos in tune, a bit like glitch art and a bit vaporwave. So on one side there is video making and on the other 3-D art. My dream would be to realize a 3-D animated movie or a videogame. Anyway, I have a lot of fun and I hope I manage to convey this feeling in my work.

Discover the artworks by Bad Mandala.

stampa fine art su carta Hahnemühle

Not Mere Copies – Discover the Beauty of Fine Art Prints

Between the artist’s creation of the artwork and its delivery to the client there is a very delicate stage: its printing. This phase is so delicate because it can influence the esthetics and the overall quality of the finished work. 

For this reason, Cinquerosso Arte works with a printshop specialized in the production of Fine Art Prints, that is to say of the highest quality possible for the reproduction of works of art. Fine Art Printing does not describe a single technique, but rather a combination of materials, practices, and instruments that make it possible to obtain the best color rendering, the perfect texture, and the most complete range of nuances possible. However, materials, practices, and instruments are not sufficient: in fact, Fine Art Printing requires the experience and the skill of highly specialized professionals who are well acquainted with the complex interactions between support materials, inks, and machinery. 

Let us examine the latter two first. Our laboratory uses Epson printers and Epson UltraChrome XDX™ pigment ink capable of reproducing 98% of the colors certified by Pantone®. This percentage may not mean much to the layperson, but what it does mean is that there will be an abundance of colors in your artwork, and of the exact shade intended by the artist. 

Our laboratory has obtained the DIGIGRAPHIE© certification released by Epson only when certain, very rigid quality criteria are met. It thus ensures that the artworks will be printed according to the most elevated standards of the field. No less important is the choice of the support material, and in this case the human factor is decisive, because it implies the choice of the best material based on the desired rendering. Different inks react differently depending on the materials to which they are applied, which always have a hue and texture of their own. Even the light, whether it’s natural or artificial, will react with the ink-material combination generating different effects which need to be foreseen. 

This is why it is important for the experience of our staff and of our printer of choice to come together to ensure the best possible result, working in concert with the artist and bearing in mind the nature of the work itself. A photograph or a digital artwork are “born” to be reproduced, and thus the final effect is easier to predict – to a certain extent. When it comes to the one-of-a-kind, handmade works of art, an even more carefully trained eye is required to understand which may be the most effective way to reproduce them so that the print is accurate and as close to the beauty of the original as possible. 

We print all of our artists’ works on Hahnemühle paper with a grammage of at least 300 gsm. An example is Photo Rag, a 100% cotton paper among the most appreciated for the creation of Fine Art Prints.

Choose your favorite artwork or the piece that is best suited for your space, and rest assured that you’ll like it even more when you finally hold it in your hands.

Take a look on our work process.

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