Sunday, February 28, 2010

MOCA Week 6



Alessandro Bavari created this piece entitled Jerome's Garden. I chose it because it reminds me of the computer game Alice that I used to play. It was essentially Alice in Wonderland only a dark version in which the cover shows Alice holding a bloody knife and has blood on her dress. This piece reminds me of the scenery in the game especially with the tea pot shaped structures in the background.




Alessandro Bavari was born in Latina, a coastal town south of Rome, Italy, on april 1963.
Grown up in an italo-french family, he was early attracted by artistic matters and decided to attend art college, where he began making photomontages at the age of 15.
Then, he studied scenography, photography, history of art and various other topics at the Academy of Fine Arts, in Rome, where he developped strong grounding in the techniques of oil, watercolours and engraving, while experimenting at the same time methods mixing tar, glue, industrial paint and exploring photographic printing techniques.
During these years, he took the habit of making numerous photographs everywhere he goes : human and animal matters, objects and architecture, pictures and landscapes, fossils and materials, which join his mental museum, also strongly influenced by indo-european cultural myths and allegories as well as 14th and 15th century artists.
Since 1993, he adds digital manipulation to his art, developping a personal artistic language using industrial and organic products from nature before incorporating photographic process, then computer digitalization, which leads to "a kind of contamination among the arts dissolving the boundaries which distinguish them".
Alessandro Bavari lives and works in Italy.


I believe the majority of the work was done with individual photos or screen shots of images found online and then photoshopped together. I also love the dullness to the art with very little color accentuating certain structures, which is something I enjoyed doing with Photoshop as well.

1 comment:

  1. The subdued palette is an important element that distinguishes his work...

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