“Furnishing is not about making sets, it is not about making beautiful pictures for magazines; rather, it is about creating a quality of life, a beauty that nourishes the soul.”
Albert Hadley
Prints are made using the technique of lithography, screen printing or etching. Each work has within it the potential to tastefully decorate and become a protagonist. With this work, it is possible to create environments that evoke deep emotions and emphasize the individuality of a space. In this quest for excellence, art stands as one of the keys to shaping an unparalleled atmosphere.
Artwork in interior design is not simply an ornament, but a medium through which emotions, stories and concepts can be expressed. Works of art, when skillfully integrated into spaces, can transform a room into a dwelling of refinement and beauty. They serve as visual fulcrums, capturing the attention and providing a multisensory experience that goes far beyond aesthetics.
The printing of original works is a true artistic process that has been established since the early twentieth century with its own characteristics and language and we now capture the growing interest of art lovers, collectors and interior designers. Fine art prints have become one of the fastest growing sectors of the art market in the past decade. Prints are commonly distinguished according to the type of matrix: etching if metal, lithography if stone, silkscreen if silk. The most appropriate distinction is based on the way in which the stencil carries the ink on the sheet: the stencil can carry the ink either with the raised part, or hollow, or flat.
The refined techniques of meticulous execution, the long and meticulous processing times, and the quantities of color and matter brought back to the sheet, constitute the characterizing elements of these printing processes, which is finding more and more consensus and appreciation, even among those who enjoy painting through techniques and patterns not tied to repetitiveness.