Paola Pivi

Paola Pivi Makes the Impossible Feel Joyful

By the editors at The Collection·April 20, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

There is a particular kind of delight that arrives when the world as you know it suddenly refuses to behave. A polar bear draped head to toe in vivid pink feathers. A full sized commercial aircraft resting on its roof in a remote Alaskan field. These are not the products of digital manipulation or idle fantasy.

Paola Pivi — Are you interested?

Paola Pivi

Are you interested?, 2015

They are the rigorously realized works of Paola Pivi, the Italian artist whose practice has, over three decades, quietly become one of the most singular and joyfully disorienting forces in contemporary art. In recent years, her profile has continued to rise through institutional presentations across Europe, Asia, and North America, with collectors and curators alike deepening their engagement with a body of work that only grows more resonant with time. Pivi was born in Milan in 1971, and the city's particular blend of design culture, postwar conceptualism, and restless creative ambition left its mark. She studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, one of Italy's most storied art institutions, where she developed the foundational conviction that art should disturb expectations rather than confirm them.

Milan in the late 1980s and early 1990s was alive with ideas, and Pivi absorbed them voraciously, though she would ultimately chart a course that was unmistakably her own. Her early years were marked by a restlessness that would prove productive, leading her eventually to relocate to Alaska, where the scale of the landscape and its surreal remoteness became a kind of studio condition, shaping everything she made. Pivi's artistic development resists easy periodization because her work has always moved fluidly between media and scale. She has made large scale sculptures, immersive installations, photography, and works on paper, and across all of these she maintains a consistent philosophical preoccupation: what happens when something familiar is removed from its context and placed in a situation it cannot logically occupy.

Paola Pivi — I was here before you

Paola Pivi

I was here before you, 2015

Her breakthrough came with works that were deceptively simple in concept and staggering in execution. The upside down airplane, a work from 2000, required extraordinary logistical coordination to realize and announced immediately that Pivi was an artist willing to mobilize real world systems in the service of perceptual rupture. It was the kind of gesture that made other artists and critics sit up and take notice. The feathered bears, perhaps her most beloved and widely recognized works, arrived as part of an ongoing series and represent Pivi at her most seductive.

These sculptures depict bears, creatures that already carry enormous cultural and psychological freight, entirely covered in soft, brilliantly colored feathers. The effect is at once absurd and genuinely moving. The bears seem both vulnerable and festive, uncanny and warm. They do not belong to the world of nature documentaries or taxidermy or children's toys, though they borrow something from all of these.

Paola Pivi — One Love

Paola Pivi

One Love, 2007

They belong to the world Pivi creates, one where strangeness is not a threat but an invitation. Works from this series have entered significant private and institutional collections globally and remain among the most sought after objects in her practice. The works available through The Collection offer a compelling window into the breadth and texture of Pivi's thinking. Among them, "Are you interested?

" and "I was here before you," both from 2015, demonstrate her facility with language and conceptual provocation embedded in material form. "One Love" from 2007 carries the warm, almost utopian spirit that runs beneath even her most challenging gestures. The works involving beads and pearls mounted to wooden panels reveal a more intimate, meditative side of the practice, one in which repetition and material accumulation become a form of contemplation. "100 Cinesi," a chromogenic print flush mounted to aluminum, belongs to an earlier body of photographic work in which Pivi staged elaborate scenes that blur the line between documentary and fiction, between the sociological and the surreal.

Paola Pivi — Executed on 19 February 2019.

Paola Pivi

Executed on 19 February 2019.

"Mama no more diapers, please" from 2013 carries the irreverent, affectionate humor that has always been part of Pivi's vocabulary, a reminder that joy and intellectual rigor are not in competition in her world. From a collecting perspective, Pivi represents an exceptionally interesting proposition. Her work sits at the intersection of several currents that continue to drive serious collecting: a rigorously conceptual foundation, a strong material and craft sensibility, genuine institutional validation, and an emotional accessibility that does not compromise intellectual depth. Her presence in the Guggenheim Museum collection places her in distinguished company, and her representation at the Venice Biennale affirmed her standing within the international conversation at the highest level.

The works on paper and the bead and pearl panel works offer collectors points of entry that are distinct from the large scale sculptures in terms of scale and practicality, while remaining deeply characteristic of her vision. Those drawn to artists such as Maurizio Cattelan, with his deadpan provocations and sculptural audacity, or to the transformative material investigations of artists like Katharina Fritsch, will find much to admire and respond to in Pivi's practice. What Pivi ultimately offers is something rarer than novelty. She offers a consistent philosophical position rendered again and again in new forms, and that position is essentially generous.

Her work does not lecture or condemn. It does not wring its hands about the state of the world, though it is fully aware of it. Instead, it asks the viewer to experience what it feels like when the rules briefly suspend, when a bear wears feathers and an airplane defies gravity and the impossible becomes not threatening but beautiful. In an art world that sometimes mistakes severity for seriousness, Pivi's luminous, uncompromising commitment to wonder feels not only refreshing but essential.

She is an artist whose best work is still ahead of her, and whose existing body of work already constitutes a genuine contribution to the history of sculpture, installation, and the imagination.

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