Roberto Pellegrinuzzi
Trajectoires (Torsade 7), 2025
Bronze
18 x 5 x 5 in
45.7 x 12.7 x 12.7 cm
45.7 x 12.7 x 12.7 cm
Ed 3 + 1 AP
Copyright The Artist
$ 8,000
Cette oeuvre est issue de la série Trajectoires. « Avec Trajectoires, Pellegrinuzzi redéfinit les paramètres de la photographie en recourant au dessin, créant des boucles qui prennent forme et relief...
Cette oeuvre est issue de la série Trajectoires. « Avec Trajectoires, Pellegrinuzzi redéfinit les paramètres de la photographie en recourant au dessin, créant des boucles qui prennent forme et relief sous les innombrables passages du crayon de plomb... Le graphite s'accumule sur la surface du papier, dévoilant la dimension sculpturale de l'image... Chaque dessin est photographié, magnifié, et enfin transposé en sculptures, mettant en lumière la matérialité de l'image à travers un parcours du dessin à la photographie, et de la photographie à la sculpture... » - Anne-Marie Dubois
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This work is part of the Trajectories series. “With Trajectories, Pellegrinuzzi redefines the parameters of photography through the use of drawing, creating loops that gradually take shape and acquire relief through countless strokes of a graphite pencil... Graphite accumulates on the paper’s surface, revealing the sculptural dimension of the image... Each drawing is photographed, enlarged, and ultimately transformed into sculptures, highlighting the materiality of the image through a progression from drawing to photography, and from photography to sculpture...” — Anne-Marie Dubois
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This work is part of the Trajectories series. “With Trajectories, Pellegrinuzzi redefines the parameters of photography through the use of drawing, creating loops that gradually take shape and acquire relief through countless strokes of a graphite pencil... Graphite accumulates on the paper’s surface, revealing the sculptural dimension of the image... Each drawing is photographed, enlarged, and ultimately transformed into sculptures, highlighting the materiality of the image through a progression from drawing to photography, and from photography to sculpture...” — Anne-Marie Dubois