Premio Combat Prize

Rebecca Bartolotti - Premio Combat Prize

OPERA IN CONCORSO | Sezione Pittura

 | Tenderly attached

Tenderly attached
acrilic body painting, panel
100x103

Rebecca Bartolotti

nato/a a
residenza di lavoro/studio: Firenze, ITALIA


iscritto/a dal 04 mag 2018


Under 35


visualizzazioni: 490

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Altre opere

 | Untitled

Untitled
oil, acrilic and paper, wood panel
80x110

 | Incomplete

Incomplete
acrilic, wood panel
100x130

Descrizione Opera / Biografia


I discovered my love for art in early childhood and realized how life could be much more complicated with it growing up.
Why? Simply because as an artist, you cannot accept the world the way it is. You keep on experimenting and challenging and pushing your inner soul in research of non-existing perfection.
I started my studies in art at the Accademia di belle arti of Florence and am now attending my masters in Painting. But my actual painting career, beginned as a perfect copying machine and then slowly dropped down all the walls of perfection in the search of who I really was as a person and as an artist. I went through the free spirit of abstract painting, the instant moment captured in a photography and the childhood power of illustration.
This whole process brought me to the point where, after self-portraits and self-portraits, I found myself covered in paint and needing to put my whole naked body on the support. I had no other way to express what my body and soul were shouting so I laid. I laid on it putting no limits between me and my work. We were one. In that moment the world stopped. I didn’t care. Not one bit. Of who I was, how I was, why I was and for who I was.
We were one.
“Tenderly Attached” is the demonstration of a devoted work that breaks down all I’ve done up to that moment.
I have also dedicated my last year to scripture and the wonderful world of monologues. Me, my expression and a million stories that come from deep in. The truth that comes from the eyes and the pure exposure to the world with no limits, no fear, no judgment.
In the end, that’s what an artist should do, right?