Matteo Ciffo - Frammenti - Venere






Holds a master's degree in film and visual arts; experienced curator, writer, and researcher.
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Matteo Ciffo's contemporary sculpture Frammenti - Venere, a cold fusion of marble and stone powders, edition 1/8, 2026, signed and authenticated, 27 cm wide by 38 cm high by 27 cm deep, 8.5 kg, from Italy.
Description from the seller
- Contemporary sculpture by Matteo Ciffo (Italy - 1987). Title Fragmenti-Venere
- Year 2026. Edition no. 1/8 - Signed and authenticated by the artist, with certificate of authenticity
- Material: Cold fusion of marble and stone powders
- Excellent condition
FRAGMENTI Collection
The comparison with classical sculpture constitutes a central element of this collection. Those shapes, historically associated with the idea of perfection, eternity, and collective memory, are taken as a starting point and subjected to a process of fragmentation and redefinition.
The form is no longer understood as a stable unity, but as a transient condition. It is interrupted, broken apart, and recomposed, revealing its unstable nature. The volume opens up, splits into blocks and fragments, generating a new structure in which time is no longer hidden, but becomes a visible element.
This tension eliminates the idea of perfection as an absolute state. What seems eternal reveals its own vulnerability. The classical form survives, but transformed: no longer a symbol of immortality, but a presence traversed by time, exposed to change and returned to a new dimension.
MATTEO CIFFO
Born in Biella in 1987, since 2007 I have developed a research focused on matter, its transformation, and the memory it preserves. My work stems from a direct relationship with noble and complex materials such as marble and stone powders, natural pigments, Armenian earths, oxides, and metals. I do not consider them mere expressive tools, but living presences, bearers of time, history, and possibilities of rebirth.
Through a process I consider more ritual than sculptural: a rebirth of the stone guided by my hand. The practice arises from observation and the desire to restore life to what has been shattered, abandoned, or forgotten. Fragments and scraps, often coming from the work of other sculptors, become the original matter for my works.
These are materials that already carry a story within themselves. I disassemble and reassemble them, producing forms that no longer belong to their previous state, but to a new condition. Each work emerges from a fragile balance between loss and rebirth, between memory and possibility, making visible the moment when matter ceases to be what it was and becomes something else.
The path takes the form of a transformation that goes beyond traditional sculpture, approaching an almost alchemical dimension. I use materials that have already lived, break them down, and recombine them to generate new forms and identities. Each creation arises from a tension between destruction and regeneration, between loss and memory, making visible a continuous state of change.
The research confronts materials that embody a deep contradiction: apparently eternal and indestructible, yet at the same time sensitive and vulnerable. What seems immutable reveals an unstable nature, capable of reacting, oxidizing, and transforming over time. This condition makes matter an active part of the work, involved in a constant dialogue with time and the environment.
Perfection yields to fragility, and eternity manifests as a living, human experience. Matter is not subordinated but becomes co-author, preserving on the surface traces of gesture, process, and its own evolution.
Autodidact, I have built my path through experimentation, observation, and listening. The approach does not aim for control, but for accompanying the material in its transformation. The resulting forms reflect how memory functions: structures in which fragments, traces, and absences coexist and regenerate.
This practice explores matter as a living archive. The sculptures emerge as presences suspended between ruin and rebirth, between permanence and transformation, restoring to matter a deeply contemporary and human dimension.
- Contemporary sculpture by Matteo Ciffo (Italy - 1987). Title Fragmenti-Venere
- Year 2026. Edition no. 1/8 - Signed and authenticated by the artist, with certificate of authenticity
- Material: Cold fusion of marble and stone powders
- Excellent condition
FRAGMENTI Collection
The comparison with classical sculpture constitutes a central element of this collection. Those shapes, historically associated with the idea of perfection, eternity, and collective memory, are taken as a starting point and subjected to a process of fragmentation and redefinition.
The form is no longer understood as a stable unity, but as a transient condition. It is interrupted, broken apart, and recomposed, revealing its unstable nature. The volume opens up, splits into blocks and fragments, generating a new structure in which time is no longer hidden, but becomes a visible element.
This tension eliminates the idea of perfection as an absolute state. What seems eternal reveals its own vulnerability. The classical form survives, but transformed: no longer a symbol of immortality, but a presence traversed by time, exposed to change and returned to a new dimension.
MATTEO CIFFO
Born in Biella in 1987, since 2007 I have developed a research focused on matter, its transformation, and the memory it preserves. My work stems from a direct relationship with noble and complex materials such as marble and stone powders, natural pigments, Armenian earths, oxides, and metals. I do not consider them mere expressive tools, but living presences, bearers of time, history, and possibilities of rebirth.
Through a process I consider more ritual than sculptural: a rebirth of the stone guided by my hand. The practice arises from observation and the desire to restore life to what has been shattered, abandoned, or forgotten. Fragments and scraps, often coming from the work of other sculptors, become the original matter for my works.
These are materials that already carry a story within themselves. I disassemble and reassemble them, producing forms that no longer belong to their previous state, but to a new condition. Each work emerges from a fragile balance between loss and rebirth, between memory and possibility, making visible the moment when matter ceases to be what it was and becomes something else.
The path takes the form of a transformation that goes beyond traditional sculpture, approaching an almost alchemical dimension. I use materials that have already lived, break them down, and recombine them to generate new forms and identities. Each creation arises from a tension between destruction and regeneration, between loss and memory, making visible a continuous state of change.
The research confronts materials that embody a deep contradiction: apparently eternal and indestructible, yet at the same time sensitive and vulnerable. What seems immutable reveals an unstable nature, capable of reacting, oxidizing, and transforming over time. This condition makes matter an active part of the work, involved in a constant dialogue with time and the environment.
Perfection yields to fragility, and eternity manifests as a living, human experience. Matter is not subordinated but becomes co-author, preserving on the surface traces of gesture, process, and its own evolution.
Autodidact, I have built my path through experimentation, observation, and listening. The approach does not aim for control, but for accompanying the material in its transformation. The resulting forms reflect how memory functions: structures in which fragments, traces, and absences coexist and regenerate.
This practice explores matter as a living archive. The sculptures emerge as presences suspended between ruin and rebirth, between permanence and transformation, restoring to matter a deeply contemporary and human dimension.
