A. Soldaini, V. Locatelli (curated by), Marco Tirelli, 2022, Sivana Editoriale, Milano
This monograph explores the complete work of Marco Tirelli (Rome, 1956), offering valuable historical and critical insights. Tirelli’s oeuvre – which is both surprising and enigmatic – runs the gamut of painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, and installation, tapping into a seemingly endless repertoire of images that fluctuate between plausibility and abstraction. He depicts figures and scenes made of a cluster of apparently well-defined microscopic pigments, which, at a closer look, break down into light particles. This makes his painting subtle and intellectual, resulting from an introspective investigation aimed at reaching or rather touching, through artistic gesture, the dimension of the absolute. The same contrast between illusion and reality, light and shadow, also characterises his sculptures and installations, which, as illustrated in these pages, create multiple plots of a continuous narrative. These, in turn, are generated and enhanced by the personal and collective imagination of the observer.