Born in Italy in 1943, artist Gianni Rossi completed his painting education at the State Art Institute and earned his master's degree at the Naples Academy of Fine Arts. His works have been exhibited nationally and in solo exhibitions in Poland. His bold geometric abstractions and non-formal compositions are characterized by a critique of “unchecked consumerism” in contemporary society. Rossi often divides a single work across multiple canvases; “with the final assembly, a precise and completed piece emerges.” The artist reuses common, everyday materials alongside acrylic paints on canvas or cotton.
Gianni Rossi’s works are part of an introspective and visual exploration aimed at understanding the world through everyday observations. By reinterpreting color and form in an abstract language, he interrogates the depths of nature and the human mind, transforming moments and emotions embedded in memory into pictorial narratives. Through vivid greens, warm yellows, passionate reds, and serene blues, he creates a balance between life energy and internal conflicts. The geometric yet uneven structure in his compositions reflects the loss of values, individualization, and internal fractures in contemporary society. The use of everyday materials such as photographic paper and sandpaper symbolizes the degradation of memories, surface friction, and the corrosive nature of reality. Each brushstroke becomes a story of transformation, inviting the viewer on both a personal and universal inner journey.