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Arcangelo Sassolino

Arcangelo Sassolino
Born1967
NationalityItalian
OccupationSculptor

Arcangelo Sassolino (born 1967) is an Italian artist known for his sculptures that uses technology.[1]

Early life

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Sassolino was born in 1967 in Vicenza, Italy.[2] He was raised in Trissino, near Vicenza, in the north-east of Italy.[3] In his 20s, he created a three-dimensional puzzle game recalling the Rubik's Cube, and was hired by Robert Fuhrer and Nextoy, LLC, representatives of Casio Creative Products, for which worked for 6 years in New York, inventing and developing original and innovative toys and games. In 1996 Sassolino went back to Italy, where he worked on marble sculpture in Pietrasanta.

Artistic Path

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In Sassolino's works the spectators find themselves in front of well known industrial materials, such as stainless steel, glass or concrete. He uses these materials into mechanical/thermodynamical fantastic machines, that make the elements reach their limits: extreme speed, friction, gravity, heat, pressure.

Sassolino's sculptures are inorganic performances in which machines take life, get broken by contrast and conflict of forces, on the verge of a breakdown (which is a fundamental aspect of his work). He works around concepts such caducity, loss, unpredictability, danger, failure.

Solo exhibitions

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Group exhibitions

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Bibliography

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Note

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  1. ^ Arnold, Willis Ryder. "Contemporary Art Museum offers first solo shows for artists to examine human form". news.stlpublicradio.org.
  2. ^ "Arcangelo Sassolino – Vancouver Biennale".
  3. ^ Morpurgo, Dani (March 13, 2019). "Arcangelo Sassolino makes material speak through existentialist art". GPS Radar.
  4. ^ "Arcangelo Sassolino". February 18, 2013.
  5. ^ "Arcangelo Sassolino – Time Tomb | z33". archief.z33.be.
  6. ^ "Piccolo animismo".
  7. ^ "Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis". Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis.
  8. ^ "Mechanism of Power". Archived from the original on 2016-03-22. Retrieved 2017-12-02.
  9. ^ "Canto V | Arcangelo Sassolino | 23/09/2016 | San Gimignano". Galleria Continua.
  10. ^ "Bevilacqua La Masa | Comune di Venezia". www.comune.venezia.it.
  11. ^ "Guggenheim". www.guggenheim-venice.it.
  12. ^ "La scultura italiana del XXI secolo". Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-12-02.
  13. ^ "Museum Tinguely – Under Destruction". www.tinguely.ch.
  14. ^ "Francis Bacon: mostra d'arte a Firenze ottobre 2012 gennaio 2013 | CCC Strozzina". www.strozzina.org.
  15. ^ "The Transported Man". Archived from the original on 2018-01-03. Retrieved 2017-12-02.
  16. ^ "Mostre Archivi".