In Giuseppe Scaiola's paintings, the world seems as elementary as it is natural. He has seen what he paints before: Water and waves, earth and wind, leaves and flowers, distant trees. Even Scaiola's knowledge of the limited picture surface and the need to shape fragments into something whole is part of the Impressionist legacy. No one will therefore consider these paintings to be outdated. The degree of simplification that the painter allows himself identifies him as a contemporary. White and black dominate in terms of colour, sparingly enlivened by yellow, red, blue and violet accents.
Exhibition until 13 April 2024
In Giuseppe Scaiola's paintings, the world seems as elementary as it is natural. He has seen what he paints before: Water and waves, earth and wind, leaves and flowers, distant trees. Even Scaiola's knowledge of the limited picture surface and the need to shape fragments into something whole is part of the Impressionist legacy. No one will therefore consider these paintings to be outdated. The degree of simplification that the painter allows himself identifies him as a contemporary. White and black dominate in terms of colour, sparingly enlivened by yellow, red, blue and violet accents.