Alessandro Padovan (1983) - BERNARD AUBERTIN 2.0 (TURQUOISE)






Over 10 years' experience in art trade and previously founded his own gallery.
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Alessandro Padovan presents BERNARD AUBERTIN 2.0 (TURQUOISE), a contemporary iron and wood artwork, 30 × 30 × 4 cm, edition of 20, dated 2026 and hand-signed, originating from Italy and sold by Galleria.
Description from the seller
Artwork by artist Alessandro Padovan, famous worldwide for his Screw Art technique.
This piece dialogues with Bernard Aubertin's radical monochrome, reinterpreting his language through industrial matter. Absolute red – identity-defining and totalizing color – here is not merely surface, but an energetic field. As in Aubertin, the monochrome becomes mental space, pure tension, spiritual vibration. However, instead of fire and combustion, we find the screw: a mechanical, modular, serial element.
The screws emerge from the plane like a dynamic weave, creating a visual rhythm that breaks the two-dimensionality and transforms red into a territory traversed by forces. If Aubertin burned matter to liberate its essence, here matter is screwed, penetrated, constructed. It is a opposite yet conceptually akin gesture: a radical act on the monochrome.
The transparent display case isolates and protects, turning the work into a contemporary relic. Red is not only a color, but an immersive experience; it is not only surface, but tension between order and impulse, between mechanical control and emotional vibration.
From this perspective, the work stands as an evolution of monochrome: from fire to screw, from destructive energy to constructive energy, preserving intact the absolute force of red.
The works of this contemporary artist fit within the path of Pop Art, Screw Art, conceptual art and urban art, recalling in visual language and cultural impact the work of major names such as Andy Warhol, Jean‑Michel Basquiat, Banksy, Jeff Koons, Keith Haring, Fontana, Imbue, obey, Padovan, Schifano, Nicole Lubbers, Bani, kev munday invader, Murakami and Damien Hirst.
At the same time, the artistic research dialogues with the imagery of luxury, iconic fashion, and global design, evoking sacred symbols and universally recognized brands such as Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Chanel, Hermès, Rolex, Ferrari, Porsche, Lamborghini.
The works are not replicas nor official collaborations with artists or brands cited, but original creations, realized with a personal style that reflects a critique and a rereading of consumerism, the symbolic value of the brand, and art as a contemporary cultural object.
This approach makes the works particularly appreciated by collectors and enthusiasts of contemporary art, luxury Pop Art, conceptual street art, and art inspired by iconic large brands, while maintaining a strong autonomous artistic identity.
Artwork by artist Alessandro Padovan, famous worldwide for his Screw Art technique.
This piece dialogues with Bernard Aubertin's radical monochrome, reinterpreting his language through industrial matter. Absolute red – identity-defining and totalizing color – here is not merely surface, but an energetic field. As in Aubertin, the monochrome becomes mental space, pure tension, spiritual vibration. However, instead of fire and combustion, we find the screw: a mechanical, modular, serial element.
The screws emerge from the plane like a dynamic weave, creating a visual rhythm that breaks the two-dimensionality and transforms red into a territory traversed by forces. If Aubertin burned matter to liberate its essence, here matter is screwed, penetrated, constructed. It is a opposite yet conceptually akin gesture: a radical act on the monochrome.
The transparent display case isolates and protects, turning the work into a contemporary relic. Red is not only a color, but an immersive experience; it is not only surface, but tension between order and impulse, between mechanical control and emotional vibration.
From this perspective, the work stands as an evolution of monochrome: from fire to screw, from destructive energy to constructive energy, preserving intact the absolute force of red.
The works of this contemporary artist fit within the path of Pop Art, Screw Art, conceptual art and urban art, recalling in visual language and cultural impact the work of major names such as Andy Warhol, Jean‑Michel Basquiat, Banksy, Jeff Koons, Keith Haring, Fontana, Imbue, obey, Padovan, Schifano, Nicole Lubbers, Bani, kev munday invader, Murakami and Damien Hirst.
At the same time, the artistic research dialogues with the imagery of luxury, iconic fashion, and global design, evoking sacred symbols and universally recognized brands such as Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Chanel, Hermès, Rolex, Ferrari, Porsche, Lamborghini.
The works are not replicas nor official collaborations with artists or brands cited, but original creations, realized with a personal style that reflects a critique and a rereading of consumerism, the symbolic value of the brand, and art as a contemporary cultural object.
This approach makes the works particularly appreciated by collectors and enthusiasts of contemporary art, luxury Pop Art, conceptual street art, and art inspired by iconic large brands, while maintaining a strong autonomous artistic identity.
