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Nanni Valentini — Studio
Nanni Valentini

Studio

1970

Studio (1970) presents a compelling meditation on fragmentation and perception, constructed through Nanni Valentini's characteristic blending of drawing, painting, and collage into a unified yet deliberately dissonant whole. The composition is organized across four loosely defined quadrants, each operating with a degree of autonomy while remaining in quiet conversation with its neighbors. A densely rendered botanical darkness occupies the upper left, its foliage rendered with painterly urgency against near-black grounds punctuated by coral and yellow accents. Opposing this, the upper right introduces an atmospheric geometric field of crosshatched marks laid over muted lavender and peach, evoking both architectural draftsmanship and meteorological abstraction. Below, the lower left quadrant anchors the work with its most intimate element, a large-scale eye drawn in charcoal and graphite with exceptional observational precision, surrounded by scattered leaf forms that seem to fall or float across the white ground like scattered thoughts. The lower right resolves into broad, teal-toned brushwork interrupted by horizontal bands of raw substrate and mark-making that recall both landscape and signal. Valentini, who trained as a ceramicist and remained deeply engaged with materiality throughout his career, brings to this work a sculptor's sensitivity to surface and layer. The mixed media approach is not merely technical but conceptual, treating the picture plane as a site of accumulation and excavation simultaneously. Collaged elements are embedded rather than applied decoratively, and the transitions between zones resist clean resolution, asking the viewer to move across registers of representation and abstraction without a fixed hierarchy. The eye at the center of the composition functions as both subject and metaphor, a motif of looking that implicates the act of viewing itself within the work's content. Executed during a particularly productive period in Valentini's practice, Studio reflects the broader interrogations of Italian art in the late 1960s and early 1970s, a moment when boundaries between drawing, painting, and assemblage were being deliberately tested. The work's intimacy of scale, seventy by one hundred centimeters, belies its conceptual ambition, rewarding close attention with a richness of mark and material that unfolds gradually. For the collector, it represents a significant example of Valentini's capacity to hold formal rigor and expressive freedom in productive tension.

Medium
Mixed media and collage on paper applied on canvas

🔨 Auction Lot

Martini Studio d'Arte: Modern And Contemporary Art

June 10, 2026

Estimate: €500 to €1,000

Lot 136

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About this work

Nanni Valentini, Studio, 1970

Studio (1970) presents a compelling meditation on fragmentation and perception, constructed through Nanni Valentini's characteristic blending of drawing, painting, and collage into a unified yet deliberately dissonant whole. The composition is organized across four loosely defined quadrants, each operating with a degree of autonomy while remaining in quiet conversation with its neighbors. A densely rendered botanical darkness occupies the upper left, its foliage rendered with painterly urgency against near-black grounds punctuated by coral and yellow accents. Opposing this, the upper right introduces an atmospheric geometric field of crosshatched marks laid over muted lavender and peach, evoking both architectural draftsmanship and meteorological abstraction. Below, the lower left quadrant anchors the work with its most intimate element, a large-scale eye drawn in charcoal and graphite with exceptional observational precision, surrounded by scattered leaf forms that seem to fall or float across the white ground like scattered thoughts. The lower right resolves into broad, teal-toned brushwork interrupted by horizontal bands of raw substrate and mark-making that recall both landscape and signal. Valentini, who trained as a ceramicist and remained deeply engaged with materiality throughout his career, brings to this work a sculptor's sensitivity to surface and layer. The mixed media approach is not merely technical but conceptual, treating the picture plane as a site of accumulation and excavation simultaneously. Collaged elements are embedded rather than applied decoratively, and the transitions between zones resist clean resolution, asking the viewer to move across registers of representation and abstraction without a fixed hierarchy. The eye at the center of the composition functions as both subject and metaphor, a motif of looking that implicates the act of viewing itself within the work's content. Executed during a particularly productive period in Valentini's practice, Studio reflects the broader interrogations of Italian art in the late 1960s and early 1970s, a moment when boundaries between drawing, painting, and assemblage were being deliberately tested. The work's intimacy of scale, seventy by one hundred centimeters, belies its conceptual ambition, rewarding close attention with a richness of mark and material that unfolds gradually. For the collector, it represents a significant example of Valentini's capacity to hold formal rigor and expressive freedom in productive tension.

Medium
Mixed media and collage on paper applied on canvas
Year
1970
Seen at
Martini Studio d'Arte

Related themes

Nature And Form, Twentieth Century, Fragmentation, Figurative Abstract, Conceptual, Teal And Coral, Male Artist, Eye Motif, Modernist, Botanical, Mixed Media, Charcoal And Graphite, Collage, Italian Artist, Geometric Abstraction, Postwar Art, Layered Surface, Works On Paper, Earth Tones, Abstract, Quadrant Composition

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