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Piero Gilardi — Orchidee sulla costa
Piero Gilardi

Orchidee sulla costa

2010

Orchidee sulla costa presents a lush, compressed vision of nature rendered entirely in polyurethane foam, the signature material through which Piero Gilardi has pursued his lifelong investigation into the boundary between the artificial and the organic. Three cream-colored orchids, their petals delicately traced with pink veining and centered by vivid yellow stamens, emerge from a bed of sand textured with scattered shells, a green bead, and fragments of stem. Behind them rises a dense wall of bamboo stalks and layered leaves rendered in multiple gradations of green, creating an almost theatrical sense of depth within the modest dimensions of the panel. The work is simultaneously sculptural and painterly, operating as a kind of nature tableau that draws the viewer into close, tactile communion with its subject. Gilardi began developing his Tappeti Natura, or Nature Carpets, in the mid-1960s, producing foam reliefs that reproduced natural landscapes with uncanny fidelity and a subtle conceptual edge. Orchidee sulla costa belongs to this long tradition, though it carries with it the accumulated resonance of decades of ecological and political thinking on the artist's part. For Gilardi, the choice of industrial foam as a medium was never simply formal. It introduced an inherent tension between nature as experienced and nature as simulated, raising questions about authenticity, desire, and the human tendency to aestheticize environments that are simultaneously under threat. The sandy foreground scattered with shells and organic debris suggests a coastal ecosystem rendered with the attentiveness of a naturalist and the artifice of a stage designer. Executed in 2010 and measuring 70 by 50 centimeters, the work is an intimate yet immersive object. Its modest scale encourages a close, almost private engagement, inviting the collector to linger over the precision of each foam-cut leaf and petal. Gilardi's works from this period are represented in major institutional collections including the Castello di Rivoli and the Centre Pompidou, and they continue to attract renewed critical attention as conversations around ecology, biopolitics, and the place of nature in contemporary art have intensified. Orchidee sulla costa offers both the sensory pleasure of an extraordinarily crafted object and the conceptual depth that has made Gilardi one of the most enduringly relevant figures to emerge from the Arte Povera generation.

Medium
Foam sculpture

🔨 Auction Lot

Martini Studio d'Arte: Modern And Contemporary Art

June 10, 2026

Estimate: €5,000 to €7,000

Lot 128

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About this work

Piero Gilardi, Orchidee sulla costa, 2010

Orchidee sulla costa presents a lush, compressed vision of nature rendered entirely in polyurethane foam, the signature material through which Piero Gilardi has pursued his lifelong investigation into the boundary between the artificial and the organic. Three cream-colored orchids, their petals delicately traced with pink veining and centered by vivid yellow stamens, emerge from a bed of sand textured with scattered shells, a green bead, and fragments of stem. Behind them rises a dense wall of bamboo stalks and layered leaves rendered in multiple gradations of green, creating an almost theatrical sense of depth within the modest dimensions of the panel. The work is simultaneously sculptural and painterly, operating as a kind of nature tableau that draws the viewer into close, tactile communion with its subject. Gilardi began developing his Tappeti Natura, or Nature Carpets, in the mid-1960s, producing foam reliefs that reproduced natural landscapes with uncanny fidelity and a subtle conceptual edge. Orchidee sulla costa belongs to this long tradition, though it carries with it the accumulated resonance of decades of ecological and political thinking on the artist's part. For Gilardi, the choice of industrial foam as a medium was never simply formal. It introduced an inherent tension between nature as experienced and nature as simulated, raising questions about authenticity, desire, and the human tendency to aestheticize environments that are simultaneously under threat. The sandy foreground scattered with shells and organic debris suggests a coastal ecosystem rendered with the attentiveness of a naturalist and the artifice of a stage designer. Executed in 2010 and measuring 70 by 50 centimeters, the work is an intimate yet immersive object. Its modest scale encourages a close, almost private engagement, inviting the collector to linger over the precision of each foam-cut leaf and petal. Gilardi's works from this period are represented in major institutional collections including the Castello di Rivoli and the Centre Pompidou, and they continue to attract renewed critical attention as conversations around ecology, biopolitics, and the place of nature in contemporary art have intensified. Orchidee sulla costa offers both the sensory pleasure of an extraordinarily crafted object and the conceptual depth that has made Gilardi one of the most enduringly relevant figures to emerge from the Arte Povera generation.

Medium
Foam sculpture
Year
2010
Seen at
Martini Studio d'Arte

Related themes

Dimensional Work, Green Palette, Conceptual, Male Artist, Sculpture, Botanical, Mixed Media, Simulated Landscape, Nature Subject, Italian Artist, Artificial Nature, Tactile Work, European, Wall Mounted, Ecological Art, Arte Povera, Neutral Tones, Polyurethane Foam, Relief Sculpture, Floral, Contemporary

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