Stefano Nurra - Golf-eeng VII





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Stefano Nurra, Golf-eeng VII, 2025, acrylic painting with gesso in a limited edition 1/1, 40 by 30 cm, in green, black and white, signed by hand, produced in Italy, Modern style, sold directly by the artist, depicting pop culture.
Description from the seller
The work is dominated by a large diagonal green band that crosses the painted surface like a suspended stretch of landscape.
The material, applied in thick and irregular layers, builds a tangible relief that transforms painting into territory.
Within the green band the essential signs of a golf course are recognizable: a small flag and a tiny, almost imperceptible figure, captured in the act of playing.
Around this central space darker geometric blocks emerge and a white field that suggest fragments of landscape or abstract architectures.
The diagonal breaks the stability of the composition and introduces a sense of continuous movement.
The viewer's gaze travels across the canvas following this trajectory, as if crossing the field together with the figure.
The contrast between the intense green, the deep black of the background, and the tactile white creates a balance between presence and void.
In this tension, the sporting action becomes almost a narrative pretext: what really emerges is the relationship between the individual and space, between human gesture and the vastness of the landscape.
The work is dominated by a large diagonal green band that crosses the painted surface like a suspended stretch of landscape.
The material, applied in thick and irregular layers, builds a tangible relief that transforms painting into territory.
Within the green band the essential signs of a golf course are recognizable: a small flag and a tiny, almost imperceptible figure, captured in the act of playing.
Around this central space darker geometric blocks emerge and a white field that suggest fragments of landscape or abstract architectures.
The diagonal breaks the stability of the composition and introduces a sense of continuous movement.
The viewer's gaze travels across the canvas following this trajectory, as if crossing the field together with the figure.
The contrast between the intense green, the deep black of the background, and the tactile white creates a balance between presence and void.
In this tension, the sporting action becomes almost a narrative pretext: what really emerges is the relationship between the individual and space, between human gesture and the vastness of the landscape.

