Leonardo Cremonini (1925-2010) - Olympic Centennial





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Leonardo Cremonini’s limited edition lithograph Olympic Centennial (1992), hand-signed on Vélin d’Arches paper, 63 × 90 cm, edition 250, in excellent condition.
Description from the seller
ABOUT THE PRINT
- Litograph on Vélin d’Arches paper, 270 gr.
- Hand signed.
- Artwork belonging to the artistic project 'Suite Olympic Centennial', year 1992, sponsored by the IOC.
- Original graphic work numbered and signed by hand by the artist.
ABOUT THE ARTWORK
The Olympic Suite consists of 50 lithographs and silkscreen prints chosen to represent various contemporary artistic trends. It was published to commemorate the first centenary of the modern Olympic Games. The selected artists work in a wide variety of movements and styles, from the hyperrealism of Antonio López to the abstraction of Sol Lewitt, including abstract expressionism, the geometrism of Arden Quin, conceptual art, pop art, the new realism of Baldaccini and Rotella, and the new fauvism of Dokoupil, among others. Among the artists represented are creators of great international renown, widely recognised by critics.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Leonardo Cremonini (1925–2010) was an Italian painter recognized as one of the most distinctive figurative artists of postwar Europe. Born in Bologna, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts before moving to Paris in the early 1950s, where he became closely associated with the intellectual and artistic circles of the Left Bank. Cremonini gained international recognition through major exhibitions across Europe and the United States and participated in prestigious events such as the Venice Biennale and Documenta.
His work is known for its intense psychological atmosphere and meticulous technique. Cremonini developed a figurative language that resisted abstraction at a time when it dominated contemporary art. His paintings often depict isolated human figures, architectural spaces, and still lifes imbued with tension, silence, and emotional ambiguity. Using dense compositions, muted colors, and sharp lighting, he explored themes of alienation, desire, and the fragility of human relationships.
Cremonini’s influence on contemporary art lies in his commitment to figurative painting as a critical and expressive tool. He demonstrated that realism could remain intellectually rigorous and emotionally complex in the modern era. His work inspired later generations of artists to revisit figurative traditions while addressing existential and social concerns, securing his legacy within European contemporary art.
ABOUT THE PRINT
- Litograph on Vélin d’Arches paper, 270 gr.
- Hand signed.
- Artwork belonging to the artistic project 'Suite Olympic Centennial', year 1992, sponsored by the IOC.
- Original graphic work numbered and signed by hand by the artist.
ABOUT THE ARTWORK
The Olympic Suite consists of 50 lithographs and silkscreen prints chosen to represent various contemporary artistic trends. It was published to commemorate the first centenary of the modern Olympic Games. The selected artists work in a wide variety of movements and styles, from the hyperrealism of Antonio López to the abstraction of Sol Lewitt, including abstract expressionism, the geometrism of Arden Quin, conceptual art, pop art, the new realism of Baldaccini and Rotella, and the new fauvism of Dokoupil, among others. Among the artists represented are creators of great international renown, widely recognised by critics.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Leonardo Cremonini (1925–2010) was an Italian painter recognized as one of the most distinctive figurative artists of postwar Europe. Born in Bologna, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts before moving to Paris in the early 1950s, where he became closely associated with the intellectual and artistic circles of the Left Bank. Cremonini gained international recognition through major exhibitions across Europe and the United States and participated in prestigious events such as the Venice Biennale and Documenta.
His work is known for its intense psychological atmosphere and meticulous technique. Cremonini developed a figurative language that resisted abstraction at a time when it dominated contemporary art. His paintings often depict isolated human figures, architectural spaces, and still lifes imbued with tension, silence, and emotional ambiguity. Using dense compositions, muted colors, and sharp lighting, he explored themes of alienation, desire, and the fragility of human relationships.
Cremonini’s influence on contemporary art lies in his commitment to figurative painting as a critical and expressive tool. He demonstrated that realism could remain intellectually rigorous and emotionally complex in the modern era. His work inspired later generations of artists to revisit figurative traditions while addressing existential and social concerns, securing his legacy within European contemporary art.

