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Edoardo Cesarino

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Articles

  • Jan 20, 2025 | dailyartmagazine.com | Edoardo Cesarino |Nikolina Konjevod |Errika Gerakiti |Tom Anderson

    Painting min Read Baroque Caravaggio left an indelible mark on many artists who came after him, as well as his own contemporaries. With its unique use of light and the focus on characters, the Caravaggio style—or Caravaggism—took Europe by storm. The Caravaggisti were an international movement that spread across the continent, each taking inspiration from the style of Caravaggio and making it their own.

  • Nov 29, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Petra Dragasevic |Maya Tola |Edoardo Cesarino |Andra Patricia Ritisan

    Art creates emotions and, generally, you either like a certain piece of art or you don’t. But despite that, what is valid for everything else is also valid for art. If you invest some time in art, get intellectually and emotionally engaged, you will start to look at it with different eyes. And a whole new world of insights will open to you. Here, you will find three reasons why it is worth learning about art. 1.

  • Nov 25, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Ania Kaczynska |Edoardo Cesarino |Candy Bedworth |Kate Wojtczak

    Review min Read Contemporary Art The 80s: Photographing Britain at Tate Britain in London is a kaleidoscopic chronicle of more-or-less a decade, where photography witnessed and participated in a profound upheaval. With nearly 350 images and archival materials, this vast exhibition paints a fragmented but resonant portrait of Britain.

  • Nov 24, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Zuzanna Stanska |Edoardo Cesarino |Lisa Scalone |Errika Gerakiti

    Henel’s works show various themes, but none of them are classic. Instead, they present rape, violence, nude women, ejaculation, menstruation, urination, and defecation. They are also filled with Bosch-like creatures, witches, frogs, insects, and cats; faces with grimaces; fantastic landscapes; and everything we expect from a top-notch nightmare. They are done with amazing quality and a stunning sense of composition and color. And they were created in a mental hospital.

  • Nov 17, 2024 | dailyartmagazine.com | Magda Michalska |Maya Tola |Edoardo Cesarino |Andra Patricia Ritisan

    November is a month of runny noses, sniffing, and coughing (at least in cold parts of Europe…). If you’re lying in bed with a fever, we have the best medicine for you: art! These paintings, showing various takes on sickness in art, will accompany you in your illness and show that you are not alone. Francisco GoyaFrancisco Goya presents himself with his personal doctor, Mr. Eugenio José García Arrieta, right after the second serious attack of his mysterious illness.

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