About the artwork
This painting by Pax Paloscia blends figuration and text in a crude, street-art style. A schematic, cartoon-inspired face emerges from a blurred background, surrounded by spontaneous, absurd or poetic inscriptions: "Let kids play with laundry cars", "La keta mine est un téléviseur"... The artist uses writing as a plastic material, somewhere between protest and urban poetry. The whole evokes an inner chaos, blending irony, popular culture and expressive urgency.
Expert opinion
This piece by Pax Paloscia perfectly illustrates his ability to blend the absurd and the meaningful, to capture the confusion of the modern world through deceptively naïve yet deeply critical compositions. Confusing, funny and disturbing, this painting questions the mechanisms of contemporary thought, with an aesthetic akin to intellectual graffiti.
About the artist
Pax Paloscia is an Italian artist born in Rome, whose work combines painting, photography, illustration and street art. Trained in the visual arts, she develops a dreamlike, engaged universe, nourished by music, urban cultures and intimate narratives. She regularly exhibits in Italy and abroad, creating works that border on the visual diary and the emotional manifesto.
Additional info
Proof of authenticity
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