VOLTA - "Falling into Blue"






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
Wrapped in currents of blue, turquoise, and pink, the figure seems to surrender to the movement of water and light. The color expands beyond the contours of the body, transforming the scene into a continuous flow where presence and movement intertwine in a fragile, luminous balance.
Signed and dated 2026 at the bottom right
Image dimensions: 90 x 70 cm
Total canvas size: 100 x 80 cm
The artwork 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 a path of 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. 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.
Wrapped in currents of blue, turquoise, and pink, the figure seems to surrender to the movement of water and light. The color expands beyond the contours of the body, transforming the scene into a continuous flow where presence and movement intertwine in a fragile, luminous balance.
Signed and dated 2026 at the bottom right
Image dimensions: 90 x 70 cm
Total canvas size: 100 x 80 cm
The artwork 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 a path of 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. 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.
