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Giovanni Campus — Untitled
Giovanni Campus

Untitled

2011

This untitled work by Giovanni Campus presents a disciplined investigation into the spatial and material possibilities of the shaped canvas. Two rectangular panels of deep crimson, covered in raw linen and saturated with acrylic pigment, are anchored to the wall and intersected by slender iron rods that extend visibly beyond the edges of the canvas support. The horizontal rod bisects both panels near their shared midpoint, while two vertical rods punctuate the composition at intervals that are deliberate yet asymmetrical, one extending above the upper canvas and below the lower, another penetrating the lower right panel and stretching beyond the frame entirely. The result is a work that refuses to contain itself within conventional pictorial boundaries, insisting instead on occupying real space and casting genuine shadows on the wall behind it. Campus engages here with a lineage of Italian experimental practice that emerged from the Arte Concreta and Spazialismo movements, in which the physical support becomes as meaningful as any applied mark. The deep burgundy tone, rich and absorptive, resists the decorative even as it draws the eye inward, while the matte iron elements introduce an industrial restraint that keeps the work grounded in materiality rather than expression. The interaction between the textile surface and the rigid metal creates a productive tension between softness and structure, between the handmade and the fabricated. The slight relief created by the stretched canvas beneath the linen further activates the surface, catching light differently across the day and reminding the viewer that this is an object with physical depth, not merely an image. For a collector, this work represents a mature and considered statement from an artist whose practice has long been concerned with the relationship between painting, sculpture, and architecture. Campus treats the wall itself as a collaborator, as the shadows cast by the protruding rods shift with changing light and effectively expand the composition beyond its 60 by 75 centimeter dimensions. The work scales well in both intimate domestic interiors and larger institutional settings, and its palette, anchored in the warm, authoritative depth of carmine and iron grey, integrates with a wide range of environments without sacrificing its singular formal logic. It is a work that rewards sustained attention and accumulates meaning over time.

Medium
Acrylic on shaped canvas and iron insert

🔨 Auction Lot

Martini Studio d'Arte: Modern And Contemporary Art

June 10, 2026

Estimate: €2,000 to €3,000

Lot 193

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About this work

Giovanni Campus, Untitled, 2011

This untitled work by Giovanni Campus presents a disciplined investigation into the spatial and material possibilities of the shaped canvas. Two rectangular panels of deep crimson, covered in raw linen and saturated with acrylic pigment, are anchored to the wall and intersected by slender iron rods that extend visibly beyond the edges of the canvas support. The horizontal rod bisects both panels near their shared midpoint, while two vertical rods punctuate the composition at intervals that are deliberate yet asymmetrical, one extending above the upper canvas and below the lower, another penetrating the lower right panel and stretching beyond the frame entirely. The result is a work that refuses to contain itself within conventional pictorial boundaries, insisting instead on occupying real space and casting genuine shadows on the wall behind it. Campus engages here with a lineage of Italian experimental practice that emerged from the Arte Concreta and Spazialismo movements, in which the physical support becomes as meaningful as any applied mark. The deep burgundy tone, rich and absorptive, resists the decorative even as it draws the eye inward, while the matte iron elements introduce an industrial restraint that keeps the work grounded in materiality rather than expression. The interaction between the textile surface and the rigid metal creates a productive tension between softness and structure, between the handmade and the fabricated. The slight relief created by the stretched canvas beneath the linen further activates the surface, catching light differently across the day and reminding the viewer that this is an object with physical depth, not merely an image. For a collector, this work represents a mature and considered statement from an artist whose practice has long been concerned with the relationship between painting, sculpture, and architecture. Campus treats the wall itself as a collaborator, as the shadows cast by the protruding rods shift with changing light and effectively expand the composition beyond its 60 by 75 centimeter dimensions. The work scales well in both intimate domestic interiors and larger institutional settings, and its palette, anchored in the warm, authoritative depth of carmine and iron grey, integrates with a wide range of environments without sacrificing its singular formal logic. It is a work that rewards sustained attention and accumulates meaning over time.

Medium
Acrylic on shaped canvas and iron insert
Year
2011
Seen at
Martini Studio d'Arte

Related themes

Materiality, Post War, Spatial Exploration, Conceptual, Minimalist, Male Artist, Relief Work, Shaped Canvas, Spazialismo, Mixed Media, Sculptural Painting, European Art, Industrial Materials, Iron And Textile, Italian Artist, Acrylic On Linen, Diptych, Geometric Abstraction, Crimson And Red, Abstract, Wall Installation

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