Cochi's Art - Children's Game





Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 136553 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Cochi's Art presents 'Children's Game', a 2024 original, contemporary mixed-media painting on canvas (50 × 70 cm), signed by hand and sold with frame, depicting pop culture themes and originating from Italy.
Description from the seller
Technique: Acrylic, graphite, oil pastels on canvas, gold leaf
Dimensions: 50x70 cm
Status: Sold with frame
Two children, united by a bubble, play as if the world around them weren’t collapsing. She wears the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh, he wears the Jewish kippah—symbols of two opposing identities, here united by an innocent and universal act.
Yet in the blue sky looms the shadow of war: a military plane, falling bombs, destruction, and blood.
This piece denounces the absurdity of war and celebrates the purity of childhood, capable of transcending cultural barriers and hate.
---
Two children, connected by a bubble, play as if the world around them weren’t collapsing. She wears the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh, he wears a Jewish kippah—symbols of two opposing identities, here united by an innocent and universal act.
Yet in the blue sky looms the shadow of war: a military plane, falling bombs, destruction, and blood.
This piece denounces the absurdity of war and celebrates the purity of childhood, capable of transcending cultural barriers and hate.
---
Technique: Acrylic, graphite, oil pastels on canvas, gold leaf
Dimensions: 50x70 cm
Status: Sold with frame
Two children, united by a bubble, play as if the world around them weren’t collapsing. She wears the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh, he wears the Jewish kippah—symbols of two opposing identities, here united by an innocent and universal act.
Yet in the blue sky looms the shadow of war: a military plane, falling bombs, destruction, and blood.
This piece denounces the absurdity of war and celebrates the purity of childhood, capable of transcending cultural barriers and hate.
---
Two children, connected by a bubble, play as if the world around them weren’t collapsing. She wears the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh, he wears a Jewish kippah—symbols of two opposing identities, here united by an innocent and universal act.
Yet in the blue sky looms the shadow of war: a military plane, falling bombs, destruction, and blood.
This piece denounces the absurdity of war and celebrates the purity of childhood, capable of transcending cultural barriers and hate.
---

