VOLTA - "Daydream"






Holds a bachelor’s degree in art history and a master’s degree in arts and cultural management.
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Description from the seller
A moment suspended between play and imagination. The figure seems to float in a space of color and light, where petals, movement and atmosphere blend into a light, dreamlike vision.
Signed and dated 2026 at the bottom right
Image dimensions: 70 x 90 cm
Total canvas size: 80 x 100 cm
The work is sold without a frame; it will be rolled and shipped in a cardboard tube.
The certificate of authenticity is issued exclusively upon request, in digital format.
Volta's research moves along the path of a return—not nostalgic, but active. Rococo is the starting point: that lightness of being, bodies that float, matter that becomes air. But the gesture with which this heritage is traversed is unequivocally contemporary. The color does not illustrate; it breathes. The brushstroke does not describe; it vibrates. What remains of the past is the deep structure—a certain idea of the body, of space, of grace—while the surface is fully present, fully alive.
Volta does not quote; it returns: its compositions seem to emerge from a shared cultural memory, brought to light with different eyes.
A moment suspended between play and imagination. The figure seems to float in a space of color and light, where petals, movement and atmosphere blend into a light, dreamlike vision.
Signed and dated 2026 at the bottom right
Image dimensions: 70 x 90 cm
Total canvas size: 80 x 100 cm
The work is sold without a frame; it will be rolled and shipped in a cardboard tube.
The certificate of authenticity is issued exclusively upon request, in digital format.
Volta's research moves along the path of a return—not nostalgic, but active. Rococo is the starting point: that lightness of being, bodies that float, matter that becomes air. But the gesture with which this heritage is traversed is unequivocally contemporary. The color does not illustrate; it breathes. The brushstroke does not describe; it vibrates. What remains of the past is the deep structure—a certain idea of the body, of space, of grace—while the surface is fully present, fully alive.
Volta does not quote; it returns: its compositions seem to emerge from a shared cultural memory, brought to light with different eyes.
