$0.00 0

Cart

No products in the cart.

Nicola Samori Contemporary Painting

This website uses affiliate links which may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.

Nicola Samori examines the theme of obsession from a number of different perspectives: that of the human body, religion, science, and the obsession of the artist with his own work. In his new paintings and sculptures he references art historical and biblical representations of ‘the healing of the possessed’.  Examples of such associations are Raphael’s “Transfiguration”, Jean-Martin Charcot, who “invented” the medical diagnosis of hysteria in his hospital in Paris in the late 19th Century, and Efisio Marini, an Italian scientist and physician who created rather unconventional sculptures from preserved corpses.

Via nicolasamori.com

Big Wall Decor Ad Girl next to large pop artwork

Nicola Samori paints renaissance-style paintings with a contemporary twist: portions of the images are disfigured. Through melting, scratching, or other forms of destruction Samori degenerates what could otherwise be conceivably a Rembrandt or Caravaggio. I love this contemporary twist on representational art. Rather than the work being simply the world inside the paint– the surface paint itself becomes part of the story as it displays the ruin of the image– melting off the canvas or being smeared. The artist displays the highest technical skill in his oil paintings in the portions of the work that he doesn’t deface.

Excerpted from Juxtapoz:

The paintings of Italian artist, Nicola Samori, are full of sensuous energy. The thirty-five year old’s style is derived from the classical paintings of early renaissance masters. With the highest degree of precession, his figures emerge from the darkness of pictorial space into the light with dramatic realism.

Samori’s methodology is one that intertwines both violence and romance, which make his paintings all the more painful: He distorts them, smears them with his hand, disfigures hem with the palette knife, paints them over, or like a torturer removes the half-dry skin of the uppermost layer of paint with a scalpel. Yet, through this destructive deconstruction, his compositions have an eery sense of beauty and elegance.

Share:

related posts

Jacob Holster

The Painterly AI Aesthetics of Jacob Holster (@bandyquantguy) In a landscape dominated by hyper-realistic renders and glossy digital imagery, the work of Jacob Holster offers a refreshing counterpoint. Operating under…
read more

Christian Quintin

In This Article: About Christian Quintin Christian Quintin doesn’t paint what he sees. He paints what you remember feeling—before you had words for it. His images arrive like déjà vu:…
read more

The Art of Jesús Aguado

Who is Jesús Aguado In an art world that often treats accessibility and profundity as enemies, Spanish artist Jesús Aguado has spent the last decade proving they might be secret…
read more

Recommended products