Stefano Nurra - Reverse Golf-eeng






Holds a master's degree in film and visual arts; experienced curator, writer, and researcher.
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Stefano Nurra – Reverse Golf-eeng, 2025, hand-signed, limited edition (1/1) acrylic painting with gesso, 30 × 40 cm, in green, black and white, depicting pop culture, sold directly by the artist, in excellent condition.
Description from the seller
This work presents itself as a vibrant dialogue between matter and symbol. At first glance, we are drawn in by the boldness of color: a lush green, laid on with broad, decisive spatula strokes that lift the paint into three-dimensional crests, almost as if to escape the canvas’ boundaries. It is a living surface, playing with ambient light and creating shadows that shift with the observer’s angle.
To interrupt this explosion of organic energy, a dense, vertical black stripe intervenes, both heavy and rigorous. It is not merely a chromatic contrast, but a true conceptual “cut” that divides the space. If the green evokes nature or a field of action, the black represents order, the road, or perhaps silence.
The narrative heart of the work, however, resides in that small white detail: a stylized pennant. This minimalist mark transforms abstraction into a familiar place. It could be the “green” of a golf course, where precision defies infinity, or an abstract signage indicating a goal reached in a mental landscape.
This work presents itself as a vibrant dialogue between matter and symbol. At first glance, we are drawn in by the boldness of color: a lush green, laid on with broad, decisive spatula strokes that lift the paint into three-dimensional crests, almost as if to escape the canvas’ boundaries. It is a living surface, playing with ambient light and creating shadows that shift with the observer’s angle.
To interrupt this explosion of organic energy, a dense, vertical black stripe intervenes, both heavy and rigorous. It is not merely a chromatic contrast, but a true conceptual “cut” that divides the space. If the green evokes nature or a field of action, the black represents order, the road, or perhaps silence.
The narrative heart of the work, however, resides in that small white detail: a stylized pennant. This minimalist mark transforms abstraction into a familiar place. It could be the “green” of a golf course, where precision defies infinity, or an abstract signage indicating a goal reached in a mental landscape.
