Bruno Ceccobelli

Senza Rete (without Net)

GMT Galerie Marc Triebold

Date 1988

Epoque 20th century

Dimension 120 x 210 x 7 cm (47¹/₄ x 82⁵/₈ x 2³/₄ inches)

Bruno Ceccobelli wrote very early in his career: "I do not want to be a market-fan artist, but to belong to all times, and this is why I believe in a foreseeing art, not just historical or literary or sociological or stylistic. I believe in a symbolic art, capable to offer a message and to pacify the world". In 1975, he first took part in a group exhibition in the Town Hall of Albach, Austria, and, two years later, he had his first solo exhibition at the Alternative Space Gallery in Rome, where he exhibited works of conceptual art. He also participated in two group exhibitions at La Stanza, an independent space self-managed by young artists.

In the early 1980s, Ceccobelli and other artists settled in the former Pastificio Cerere, a large abandoned industrial space located in the San Lorenzo quarter in Rome. The group, known as the New Roman School or San Lorenzo Workshop,[4] included Piero Pizzi Cannella, Marco Tirelli, Giuseppe Gallo, Gianni Dessì, Nunzio Di Stefano and Domenico Bianchi. The Italian art critic Achille Bonito Oliva wrote that these artists were "all bearers of individual poetics and all streams towards a common aesthetic mentality and a moral vision of art"

Date: 1988

Epoque: 20th century

Signature: signed, dated and titled on the verso

Dimension: 120 x 210 x 7 cm (47¹/₄ x 82⁵/₈ x 2³/₄ inches)

Provenance: Studio Bruno Ceccobelli, Rome (1988); collection Yuko Nobs, Switzerland and Japan (1989); 

Exhibition: Galerie Triebold, Basel, Switzerland, 1989.

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GMT Galerie Marc Triebold

19th to 21st Century paintings, sculptures, works on paper and prints. German Expressionism, Modern, internationally significant Contemporary Art, Katsushika Hokusai

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