Luciano ventrone caravaggio biography
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At the same time he made images of succulent, mouth-watering materiality, almost hyper-real in their insistent pictorial immediacy. Well aware that such forms decay and their ripe appeal is transitory, the painter has fixed them in an ideal state; they are archetypes of unattainable perfection.
Similarly, Ventrone's depiction of broad, foaming seascapes harness this idealised moment.
Fastidiously arranged and carefully lit, he revealed the simple, everyday beauty of cherry, grape, lemon and rose. Set against monochromatic backgrounds of white, grey or black, the subject is lit from multiple angles, allowing for a full and objective appraisal of what we behold.
The artist effected a forensic examination and meticulous rendering of fruit and flowers which form his subject.
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All site content Copyright C 2000-2025 by Distributed Art Publishers, Inc. and the respective publishers, authors, artists. These images preserve and celebrate the object of desire, at the instant when it might be at its most desirable. A certain romantic melancholy accompanies Ventrone's skilful iterations.
Ventrone's works have been exhibited in over twenty museum shows globally, such as the Museo delle Genti d’Abruzzo, Museo civico e Pinacoteca, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art of Trento and Rovereto, Musei di San Salvatore in Lauro, and at the 54th Venice Biennale at the Italian National Pavillion.
He painted real objects but, because of his utilisation of certain contemporary techniques as part of the artistic process, the objects depicted are transported into a metaphysical, hyper-real context. What we see in a Ventrone painting is not 'real' because it is not what we would see were we to look with the naked eye - we see more.
The detail and artistry evoke the sound, scent and touch of the water, leading the viewer down a familiar path of sensory recognition and visual exploration.
In his capturing of a moment, an interlude of stillness and calm, the artist revealed the tension between the real and unreal and our wish to make tangible that which eludes us.
Luciano Ventrone
Letture, 2020
Oil on linen
23 ½ x 35 ½ in
60 x 90 cmLuciano Ventrone
Vendemmia, 2019
Oil on linen
90 x 130 cm
35/4 x 51.1 inLuciano Ventrone
Alice, 2015
Oil on linen
55 x 150 cm
21.7 x 59 inLuciano Ventrone
Manuela, 2015
Oil on mixed media on linen
51 1/8 x 35 3/8 in
130 x 90 cmLuciano Ventrone
Passioni, 2014-2020
Oil on mixed media on linen
20 x 23 ½ in
50 x 60 cmLuciano Ventrone
Sopra il Canneto, 2014-2018
Oil on linen
20 x 23 ½ in
50 x 60 cmLuciano Ventrone
Universi, 2013-2016
Oil on linen
60 x 90 cm
23.6 x 35.4 inLuciano Ventrone
Mutamenti, 2013-2014
Oil on linen
100 x 100 cm
39.4 x 39.4 inLuciano Ventrone
Varietà, 2012-2018
Oil on linen
90 x 110 cm
35.4 x 43.3 inLuciano Ventrone
Candore, 2012-2017
Oil on linen
40 x 40 cm
15.8 x 15.8 inLuciano Ventrone
I colori del bianco 3, 2012-2017
Oil on linen
40 x 40 cm
15.8 x 15.8 inLuciano Ventrone
Malizia, 2012-2014
Oil on linen
20 x 27 ½ in
50 x 70 cmLuciano Ventrone
Codice Condiviso, 2012
Oil on mixed media on linen
23 ½ x 27 ½ in
60 x 70 cmLuciano Ventrone
Easter Flavor, 2012
Oil on linen
20 x 23 ½ in
50 x 60 cmLuciano Ventrone
Le Sorelle, 2012
Oil on linen
20 x 20 in
50 x 50 cmLuciano Ventrone
Dettagli, 2011-2018
Oil on linen
20 x 27 ½ in
50 x 70 cmLuciano Ventrone
Amicizie, 2011
Oil on linen
20 x 27 ½ in
50 x 70 cmLuciano Ventrone
Germogli, 2010-2019
Oil on linen
23 ½ x 35 ½ in
$ 76,500.00
60 x 90 cmLuciano Ventrone
Meridione, 2010-2017
Oil on linen
23 ½ x 35 ½ in
60 x 90 cmLuciano Ventrone
L'Ora Del Tramonto, 2007
Oil on canvas
39 x 32 in
99.1 x 81.3 cmLuciano Ventrone
Sotto il Pergolato, 2007
Oil on linen
23 ½ x 27 ½ in
60 x 70 cmLuciano Ventrone
Pianetini, 1997
Oil on linen
90 x 130 cm
35.4 x 51.1 inLuciano Ventrone
Il sacco del viandante, 1995
Oil on linen
80 x 100 cm
31.5 x 39.4 inLuciano Ventrone
Maternità, 2012
Oil on linen
20 x 20 in
50 x 50 cm
Luciano Ventrone
CATALOGO RAGIONATO DELL'OPERA PITTORICA 1956-2021, 2024
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Luciano Ventrone the Twentieth-century Caravaggio
These paintings must be considered within the context of the cultural and art-historical moment of their creation, a moment of strong reaction- which began in the early seventies- against the non-figurative, or abstract, language which then had absolute predominance in Italy and in the western world.
With the decline of these styles ( used by some artists with exceptional results) figurative paintings has been resurrected after decades of silence, having been seen as a refuge of academic tradition or as a literary, illustrative tool.
This return to the figurative is happening right before our eyes and as many and varied ways of expression.
Ventrone's works show us things more fully and more clearly than they appear to us in reality; everything is in focus, everything can be scrutinised. His paintings 'invite a mood of pure contemplation'; they are works of masterful skill and supreme aesthetic beauty.
Born in 1942, Luciano Ventrone lived and worked in his native Italy.
The most definite, the most easy to identify, of these is Hyperrealism, often violent and now already in a phase of of fragmentation, breaking up into a series of different channels of experimentation. Catalog
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It would take too long here to discuss the relationship between the fall of abstraction (and the avant-garde in general) and the decline of leftist political currents linked with the Soviet Union; the idealism lost any validity from the seventies onwards.However, it is worth nothing that this is the second experience in European history of a return to figurative painting following a period of abstract, intellectual, anti-naturalist, arid cerebral formulæ.
A precedent was established towards the end of the XVIth century with the decline of Mannerism which had a leading influence, lasting about seventy years, in a period fraught with heavy political tension created by the opposing forces of Protestant Reformation.
One of the most singular aspects of this return to figurative painting at the end of the XVIth century was, of course, the birth of the Still-Life which grew as an autonomous genre in Italy and Netherlands.
In Italy, both in Rome and Lombardy, the Still Life was born within the context of the circle and work of that supreme genius of XVIth century realism, Michelangelo da Caravaggio; in the Netherlands the more spectacular examples were painted in Antwerp at the times of Peter Paul Rubens, whose Art marked the end of Mannerism in Nothern Europe.
How should Luciano Ventrone’s painting be classified?
It’s roots undoubtedly lie in the now outdated period of Hyperrealism itself; there is, thought, clear evidence that his work is able to greatly surpass it and hence avoid its pitfalls.
These still lifes are not taken directly from objective reality, rather a rediscovery of it through the optical mechanisms of photography.
Although we are often unaware of it, or visual perception is today modified and conditioned by the products of mechanical reproduction and the media; our vision of the outside world is filtered by photography, colour printing, cinema and television.
This filter is neither abolished nor ignored in the work of Luciano Ventrone; on the contrary, it is accentuated and serves as an aid to a rediscovery of the realities of nature in all of its visual and tactile aspects; life, colour, transparency, density.
The subjects of these compositions stand out with extraordinary force against a background often reminiscent of the endless, lightless depth of cosmic space.
These are paintings which ask us to remain in harmony with an environment which is no longer our traditional one, but one that has been altered by machines, altered because of the breakthrough of those spaces limits within which we have lived until now.
Luciano Ventrone
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Tel. These paintings are bravura acts of technical accomplishment, which echo those of Caravaggio and the great Dutch still-life painters: Andreas Bosschaert and Jan Davidz de Heem.
Ventrone's pictures strive to locate the essence of his subject through the discipline of technique, artfully-structured composition and exclusive focus.
He lavished his attention on describing rich and subtle colour and texture, articulated by a masterful representation of light. The paintings allow us to notice every blemish and admire every curve of flesh in a piece of fruit or on a naked female form. Ideas of control and appetite interplay: we are caught between discipline and desire, our hunger provoked, all too aware that we are viewing a vividly realistic illusion.
The very act of representation points to the fact that the actual is absent.
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D.A.P. Though he admited to sharing a strong affinity for the work of Caravaggio, Ventrone did not consider himself a realist painter in the traditional sense.