By Marzio Tamer
Located in Milan, IT
Watercolor by the most astonishing Italian artist: Marzio Tamer. The Chester Arm Chair is in the artist's atelier. The artist is able to master light and subjects and texture -such as as leather- as no one else. His objects are placed in an empty space, giving a metaphysical atmosphere to the painting.
The watercolor painting is mounted on canvas and stretched, ready to be hung, unframed.
The details show: a preparatory sketch, the signature, and a close-up revealing the surface of the painting.
Tamer is represented worldwide by Salamon&C.
Tamer's biography
Marzio Tamer was born in 1964 in Schio, a town in the region of Veneto, northern Italy. He studies in Milan where he lives and works. An autodidact painter and profound connoisseur of nature and of its rhythms, for his debut in 1993 he is fostered by the Salamons. They encourage him to leave acrylic painting aside in order to begin experimenting with egg tempera. In a few years, this technique turns out to be the most congenial to the artist's intents.
The meticulous attention underlying paintings in egg tempera absorbs Tamer in very long lead times, and once more he is supported in testing different techniques. In 2002 Tamer begins a fruitful journey in fully understanding acquarelle, through the dry brush style. Few years later he masters this new technique like few other artists, being able to benefit from the typical freshness of this language. At the same time he doesn't neglect his usual formal perfectionism and doesn't betray his impeccable point of view, recognizable despite the variety of subjects depicted.
His paintings are appreciated by both the public and the critics, unquestioningly. Journalists of this field, who value his intellectual autonomy from trendy genres, write widely about him.
In 1999 he exhibits in London, at the Mathiessen Gallery, in Duke Street, where he is spotted by Timothy Standring, curator of the Paul Getty Museum and still chief curator of the Denver Art Museum. Standring's enthusiasm for Tamer's pieces fostered the author's visibility in the USA.
In 2005 Salamon&Co. organizes a retrospective dedicated to the ten year-long activity performed together and on that occasion issues an exhaustive catalogue, published by De Luca Editori d'Arte.
Tamer’s point on view:
In spite of the technical virtuosity, his painting is permeated of profound poetry, unicity and modernity. His main source of inspiration is nature: landscapes and portraits of animals. Although he invents and makes his landscapes in an atelier, the verisimilitude with reality is surprising. Instead, the portraiture of animals is a different process: before he deeply observes immersed in nature, later, once he acquired the exact physiognomy of the animals, Tamers places them in a contest with no elements, empty: he calls them “suspended backgrounds”. Yet although unreal, they give a sense of space. And it is this setting that makes his production unprecedented.
The seeming simplicity characterizing all his paintings derives from a profound attention to the composition that allows him to interpret the most complex atmospheres depicting them with an exemplary neatness.
Another point of strength of Tamer's paintings is the so refined palette choice, often limited to few colours per painting - or so it appears - of rare formal elegance.
Marzio's iconographic selection shows a recognizable and never predictable point of view, subjects or atmospheres are rarely replicated. The profound aesthetic research and the artist's strong personality permeate his painting: poetic, unique, unprecedented, intelligent and sensible.
Solo exhibitions:
His exiguous works didn't prevent him from designing thirteen personal exhibitions (at Salamon&Co. Milano Mathiessen Gallery, London) and to take part, sporadically, in institutional exhibitions.
His artworks have been exhibited in:
Masterpiece, London
Olympia International Art Fair, London
Miart, Milan
ArtVerona, Verona
Roma Contemporary, Rome
AAF, Amsterdam and Milan
His pieces are:
Art Museum of Denver, Colorado
Lord Rothschild, Londra
And in many private collections of Italian and French entrepreneurs
Special happenings:
He was invited at the 54th International Art Exhibition Biennale di Venezia, where he displayed the landscape acquarelle Rio Stagno.
He is now exhibiting at Renzo Piano's Museum, MUSE, in Trento (northern Italy), his first important retrospective.
Gianni Berengo Gardin...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Marzio Tamer Paintings