Padelah (1961) - Spring - cod. cod. 160326-1






Master’s in culture and arts innovation, with a decade in 20th-21st century Italian art.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 134841 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Description from the seller
Original Artwork on canvas with Artist's Certificate
Padelah - Atri-Italy 1961
cod 160326-1
Technique: elaborated acrylic enamels with a textured, relief effect
50 x 50 x 2 cm.
Signed and hand-authenticated on the back
Certificate signed by the Artist
VISIT also our online auction gallery with a pay-what-you-wish policy at "delauretisart"
PADelah was born in Teramo, Italy in 1961. He grows artistically in a flourishing environment, a family of artists and gallerists. His life pours into the expression of colorful compositions, inspired by the shapes of nature and transformed by the artist into motifs and repeated patterns. An initially abstract painterly idea, which through color expresses itself in optical compositions. His very colorful canvases enchant with the possibility of art as pure poetry, like a daydream, like crystallization of a concept of painting, distant from everything and precisely for this reason so close to life.
Seller's Story
Original Artwork on canvas with Artist's Certificate
Padelah - Atri-Italy 1961
cod 160326-1
Technique: elaborated acrylic enamels with a textured, relief effect
50 x 50 x 2 cm.
Signed and hand-authenticated on the back
Certificate signed by the Artist
VISIT also our online auction gallery with a pay-what-you-wish policy at "delauretisart"
PADelah was born in Teramo, Italy in 1961. He grows artistically in a flourishing environment, a family of artists and gallerists. His life pours into the expression of colorful compositions, inspired by the shapes of nature and transformed by the artist into motifs and repeated patterns. An initially abstract painterly idea, which through color expresses itself in optical compositions. His very colorful canvases enchant with the possibility of art as pure poetry, like a daydream, like crystallization of a concept of painting, distant from everything and precisely for this reason so close to life.
