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24.03.22 05:07 PM

Bruno di maio (1944) italian surrealist painter (a c ) (nx power lite)

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15.04.23 12:27 PM

Bruno Di Maio, one of the Italy’s best new figurative artists, lives and works in Tuscany, Italy.

His work reflects his great love for Renaissance paintings, yet at the same time

a strong desire for expressive autonomy. Di Maio tries, successfully, in his allegorical and surrealistic

interpretation of present, to give life to the recollect quality of the past. The originality of his vision is seen in the

sumptuous subject matter, the quality of his chiaroscuro and the dramatic light effect on the figures and objects in

his paintings. His work is happy, carnal, rich in colour and vibrant with light. In addition to paintings, his artistic

training extends to sculpture, engraving, excellent watercolours as well as astounding trompe l’oeil mural paintings. His works can be found in private and public

collections in Europe, Japan, Australia and in the United States.

Some words about me

 I was born in North Africa to Italian parents who were among the first "farmers" of that land. I started to mess around with coloured pencils

early on; it was my only fun in the sunny loneliness of that great farm. A long illness stuck me in bed where I developed a passion for reading and

fables and the frantic need to represent my fantastic and fabulous "friends" with my coloured pencils. All of this, set ablaze perhaps by the

implacable African sun, propelled me toward Art.  I attended the Art Institute in Perugia and Rome and worked in the

antiquarian environment of the Capital, which was indeed the city of the myth at that time. Among Piazza di Spagna, via Margutta and via del Babuino, in the ideal quadrilateral of the art, I worked as a restorer

beside the best teachers of the era, including Pico Cellini, my spiritual mentor. It was there that I started to know and deeply love the great

paintings. I learned from gilders, carvers, cabinetmakers; never forgetting to see the world with the marvelling eyes of a child and to

represent it with the skill of a good artisan. Since I have never found a satisfactory definition of "Art," rather than consider myself an "Artist,"

I prefer to call myself what I am in reality: a painter.