Year of creation | 2023 |
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Dimensions | 62 W × 82 H × 2 D cm |
Type of art | painting |
Style | figurative |
Genre | portrait |
Materials | oil, canvas |
Framing | the artwork is sold with framing |
Type of packaging | wooden box |
"Tell me on a Sunday" portrays a girl immersed in a summer light, the background of the sea can be glimpsed behind the wall. Her expression reflects a kind of foreboding that is passing through her, a melancholy feeling in contrast to the bright light that envelops her. She has a tattoo with a heart with angel wings on her shoulder and, on the wall, next to her shadow, we can also see the one of a feather falling from her tattoo, in an imaginary way, symbolizing the omen of loss that the girl is experiencing perceiving. I thought of titling it "Tell me on a Sunday" imagining that the young woman thinks that, if she has to receive that news of abandonment, she wants it to happen on a day of celebration. The series of my new production of works characterized by dreamlike and symbolic atmospheres continues. The painting is framed, signed on its back and comes with certificate of authenticity.
Born in Milan, Simona Zecca is a self-taught artist who has always loved drawing and art since childhood and has always continued to cultivate her passion for art even during her studies and in the period in which she worked. in marketing. She loves studying new and various techniques and over the years she deepened the use of graphite, colored pencils, watercolor, acrylic, airbrush and oil, which is currently his favorite technique. In 2015 she decided to follow the ever-present call of art to which she began to devote herself full time from 2016, initially customizing mainly helmets and motorcycle parts with airbrush and at the same time expressing herself through his paintings on canvas. In 2019 she began to exhibit her artworks, immediately receiving an excellent response from the public and critics and obtaining various awards. Initially hyper-realistic, she is now expressesing herself through a modern realism and prefers female portraits. She has always been particularly focused on the expressiveness of the gaze.