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"Senza Titolo" by Lucia di Luciano features a white canvas adorned with patches of vibrant pink, yellow, and aqua, creating a lively contrast. Delicate, flowing lines weave across the canvas, connecting the colorful forms, suggesting growth or movement. The piece exemplifies abstract expressionism through its spontaneous, gestural marks, and vibrant color palette, reflecting di Luciano's exploration of color theory. Historically grounded in the Arte Programmata movement, this work embodies a balance between structure and freedom, demonstrating di Luciano's continued innovation in modern abstract painting. ...
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Lucia di Luciano’s artistic journey is rich and multifaceted, rooted in her early work within Italian geometric abstraction. She continues to explore the vast possibilities of painting with bold creativity and a deep sense of freedom. Her recent works condense the history of abstract art into pieces that feel essential, liberated, and emotionally resonant. As a prominent figure in the Arte Programmata movement, she contributed to experimental artistic ventures that sought to redefine the relationship between individual creativity and collective processes through emerging technologies. This post-war movement carried a utopian spirit, aiming to innovate both form and concept. Over time, di Luciano immersed herself in color theory before reintegrating vibrant color into her practice with renewed intuition. Moving beyond earlier formal rigor, her recent paintings embrace spontaneity and deconstruction while remaining firmly connected to the broader tradition of abstraction. Her work features a distinctive visual language, combining repetition, geometry, ornamentation, and automatic drawing to create compositions that reference styles such as optical art and expressionism, yet maintain a uniquely original character. Through this layered approach, di Luciano has established herself as an important and innovative figure in modern abstract painting. ...
Herald St was established in 2005 by Ash L’ange and Nicky Verber. With two spaces across London, Herald St represents twenty-five international artists and participates in multiple art fairs including Art Basel, Frieze London, and Frieze Los Angeles amongst others. Works by Herald St artists are held in many museum collections and are regularly included in exhibitions within public institutions.