Mosconi - La Scalinata





Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 132849 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Mosconi presents La Scalinata, a contemporaneous cityscape in original edition, created in 2026 using felt-tip pen and spray paint on cardboard in blue, white, green, yellow, red and multicolour, 50 by 70 cm, weighing about 1 kg, sold with a small wooden frame and a certificate of authenticity, directly from the artist, in good condition.
Description from the seller
The work fits within the strand of the author’s interior landscapes, where nature is never a simple reproduction of reality, but a means to explore concepts of freedom and spirituality. In this context, “Dawn on the Mountains” uses the moment of sunrise as a metaphor for rebirth and hope. The compositional discipline, typical of his rational training, blends with a poetic sensibility that transforms the peaks into almost abstract figures, symbols of inner challenges and the mysteries of life. The mixed technique (acrylic, spray paint and geometric strokes) gives the landscape a modern and vital vibration, and although the author often draws inspiration from Joan Miró’s surrealism for the freedom of fantasy, in his mountains a more essential and contemplative stroke emerges, aimed at recreating those “infinite spaces” that are the core of his artistic quest. The color choice, characterized by vibrant, bright colors, seeks to convey a strong enthusiasm and a “vibrant will to live.” The dawn is therefore not just an atmospheric phenomenon, but an invitation to the viewer to look “beyond the corner,” toward what new destiny may offer. For this reason the work succinctly represents the union between the rationality of the scholar and the instinct of the artist, where the mountain becomes the physical and metaphysical place in which man confronts the harmony of nature.
The painting 50x70 is ready to be hung and is provided with a certificate of authenticity.
Please note that the colors in the images may differ slightly due to different lighting conditions.
The painting was created without a brush; the colors were applied with acrylic spray paint and indelible markers.
The painting, made on cardboard in 2026, is edged by a small wooden frame. It is also dated, signed, and titled on the front.
The work fits within the strand of the author’s interior landscapes, where nature is never a simple reproduction of reality, but a means to explore concepts of freedom and spirituality. In this context, “Dawn on the Mountains” uses the moment of sunrise as a metaphor for rebirth and hope. The compositional discipline, typical of his rational training, blends with a poetic sensibility that transforms the peaks into almost abstract figures, symbols of inner challenges and the mysteries of life. The mixed technique (acrylic, spray paint and geometric strokes) gives the landscape a modern and vital vibration, and although the author often draws inspiration from Joan Miró’s surrealism for the freedom of fantasy, in his mountains a more essential and contemplative stroke emerges, aimed at recreating those “infinite spaces” that are the core of his artistic quest. The color choice, characterized by vibrant, bright colors, seeks to convey a strong enthusiasm and a “vibrant will to live.” The dawn is therefore not just an atmospheric phenomenon, but an invitation to the viewer to look “beyond the corner,” toward what new destiny may offer. For this reason the work succinctly represents the union between the rationality of the scholar and the instinct of the artist, where the mountain becomes the physical and metaphysical place in which man confronts the harmony of nature.
The painting 50x70 is ready to be hung and is provided with a certificate of authenticity.
Please note that the colors in the images may differ slightly due to different lighting conditions.
The painting was created without a brush; the colors were applied with acrylic spray paint and indelible markers.
The painting, made on cardboard in 2026, is edged by a small wooden frame. It is also dated, signed, and titled on the front.

