Loading Spinner

Lorenzo Piemonti Art for Sale and Sold Prices

b. 1935 - d. 2015

Lorenzo Piemonti was born in 1935 in Carate, not far from Milan in the area known as Brianza, where he still continues to live in one of the city's nineteenth-century working-class houses. He has captured the attention of critics in Italy as well as abroad ever since beginning to work with sculptures that find their primary matrix in numbers, and in the construction of three-dimensional progressions on the manifold variations of numerical sequences. The figurative arts are by no means allen to Piemonti's activities (one remembers the period of the works in which he dealt with the theme of the "sewing machine"�) but since the middle of the 1960s he has preferred to pursue a path where mental discipline and logical rigor, coupled with manual expertise, concentrate into a synthesis ot which the impact is equally visual and environmental. Piemonti matured as an artist during the decade he spend in central Switzerland, in close contact with the major protagonists' of Swiss Concrete Art, and since tha time he has moved in highly individual directions, as witnessed by his "chromoplastic"� works - cromoplastici MADI' - and by his recent series of "accelerations"�. Along with a representative of the Argentinean movement, he was the founder of the Italian MIDI' group (for materialismo dialettico, or "dialectical materialism"�) and his works have been frequently shown, in both solo and group exhibitions, in France, Switzerland, Serbia, the United States, Hungary, Rumania, Spain, and numerous other countries. In the course of his period in Switzerland, from 1965 to 1975, Piemonti collaborated as a sculptor with Zurich's Schlaeppischaufensterfiguren company, realizing models for fashion shows: his figures have beer employed by fashion designers such as Balenciaga, at the museums o Zurich and Madrid; by Yves Saint Laurent at the New York Metropolitan Museum, and at the Museum of Arts and Fashion at the Paris Louvre; by Giorgio Armani at New York's Guggenheim Museum; by Courèges and others in any number of the world's most important cities. On the international scene, Piemonti has had a one-man show at Belgrade's National Museum, and starting in 2003 a number of his MADI' works will be present at the Kilgore Law Center and the MADI' Museum in Dallas, Texas. His works are also found in the museums of many cities both in Italy and abroad. Lorenzo Piemonti's work has often been discussed by distinguished critics, and his work has received the attention of Vivianne Fradkoff and Anita Villa - respectively of the University of Geneva and the Brera Accademy of Fine Arts-who have examined his mode of communication in their doctoral theses.

Read Full Artist Biography

About Lorenzo Piemonti

b. 1935 - d. 2015

Biography

Lorenzo Piemonti was born in 1935 in Carate, not far from Milan in the area known as Brianza, where he still continues to live in one of the city's nineteenth-century working-class houses. He has captured the attention of critics in Italy as well as abroad ever since beginning to work with sculptures that find their primary matrix in numbers, and in the construction of three-dimensional progressions on the manifold variations of numerical sequences. The figurative arts are by no means allen to Piemonti's activities (one remembers the period of the works in which he dealt with the theme of the "sewing machine"�) but since the middle of the 1960s he has preferred to pursue a path where mental discipline and logical rigor, coupled with manual expertise, concentrate into a synthesis ot which the impact is equally visual and environmental. Piemonti matured as an artist during the decade he spend in central Switzerland, in close contact with the major protagonists' of Swiss Concrete Art, and since tha time he has moved in highly individual directions, as witnessed by his "chromoplastic"� works - cromoplastici MADI' - and by his recent series of "accelerations"�. Along with a representative of the Argentinean movement, he was the founder of the Italian MIDI' group (for materialismo dialettico, or "dialectical materialism"�) and his works have been frequently shown, in both solo and group exhibitions, in France, Switzerland, Serbia, the United States, Hungary, Rumania, Spain, and numerous other countries. In the course of his period in Switzerland, from 1965 to 1975, Piemonti collaborated as a sculptor with Zurich's Schlaeppischaufensterfiguren company, realizing models for fashion shows: his figures have beer employed by fashion designers such as Balenciaga, at the museums o Zurich and Madrid; by Yves Saint Laurent at the New York Metropolitan Museum, and at the Museum of Arts and Fashion at the Paris Louvre; by Giorgio Armani at New York's Guggenheim Museum; by Courèges and others in any number of the world's most important cities. On the international scene, Piemonti has had a one-man show at Belgrade's National Museum, and starting in 2003 a number of his MADI' works will be present at the Kilgore Law Center and the MADI' Museum in Dallas, Texas. His works are also found in the museums of many cities both in Italy and abroad. Lorenzo Piemonti's work has often been discussed by distinguished critics, and his work has received the attention of Vivianne Fradkoff and Anita Villa - respectively of the University of Geneva and the Brera Accademy of Fine Arts-who have examined his mode of communication in their doctoral theses.