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Art Advisory
In Angelo Accardi's mixed media masterwork "Who Killed Snow White," the artist invites us into a surreal confluence of eras and themes. A giant blue ostrich dominates the scene, a nod to the timeless amidst a room filled with art, introducing a modern-day narrative with Jeff Bezos on a skateboard and a whimsical touch with Snow White and her dwarves, all watched over by Salvador Dalí holding an Amazon box. This composition challenges viewers to navigate the layers of meaning, blending the ancient with the immediate, fairy tales with corporate symbolism, and the classical with pop culture, encapsulating Accardi's signature dialogue between the past and the present, reality and surrealism.
Originally from a small town in the south of Italy Angelo Accardi moved to Napoli to study fine arts at the Art Academy of Naples. Shortly after, in the early 90s, he set up his personal studio close to his childhood home to embark on his pursuit of painting and sculpture. In the course of his artistic development, Accardi has been on a constant search for new sensations using mixed media to depict figures against differing social backgrounds.
Accardi’s debut on the art scene was strongly characterized by what in Italian art is referred to as “figura,” a representation of the human body, as well as by pictorial and symbolic art. His focus is on the study of humankind and the space we inhabit. Accardi draws from this focus in every one of his collections as he illustrates surreal visions of everyday life under realistic backdrops of urban landscapes.
The cycle of works called Human Collection depicted on an attenuated atmosphere, suggesting the softness of cotton wool – where the figures are masterfully veiled as if by a sheath of moistness – marks a fundamental passage in his artistic development. Ironic and surrealistic, Accardi’s unique perspective and Avant-Garde style has exhibited at galleries as well as several solo and group exhibitions worldwide.
In the last three decades, Accardis’ artistic path led him to contemplate social representations through collections like Misplaced, Human Collection, and Blend. These collections reveal the contradictions in every day, working with commonplace objects and backdrops making the created scene more relatable. Using humor, symbolism, and tributes to famed artists before him Accardi represents culture, history, and even a prediction of the future.
140x200x5 cm | 55x78x1 in
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140x200 cm | 55x78 in
200x200 cm | 78x78 in
180x180 cm | 70x70 in
160x240 cm | 62x94 in