Two pink works of three meters high signed Guillaume Bottazzi close to Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde in Marseille
The artist Guillaume Bottazzi has signed two works of three meters high close to Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde in Marseille.
The fuchsia, buttercup pink, azalea and rose rose tones of these glass works take us sinuously into a delightfully unreal universe. They create a dreamlike, enchanting space that evolves according to our imagination. These creations are an ode to joie de vivre.
They were made with enamels, a natural material composed of powdered minerals. The various minerals that make up the enamel are for example silica, feldspar, kaolin, metal oxides, titanium, copper carbonate, cobalt, iron oxide, manganese and tin.
These works are located close to Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde at 40 rue Docteur François Morucci and 2 rue Fénelon in the 6th arrondissement of Marseille.
For this year 2023, the famous artist Guillaume Bottazzi invites us to a gargantuan artistic journey with 40 works of art to discover in France as part of the European Heritage Days. The works presented criss-cross the country from north to south of France, from Lille, via Paris, Lyon, Marseille and up to Mandelieu... Nine of them are to be discovered in the South region, including six in Marseille.
Guillaume Bottazzi is a French visual artist with a psychological and poetic approach. It has been operating for 30 years in Europe, Asia and the United States.
The artist has signed more than 100 works of art in public spaces. It receives private and public commissions from museums, such as the Miyanomori Museum of Art, who commanded him the largest painting in Japan that dresses the museum, the Century Art Museum or the Mori Museum; cities, such as Brussels Capital or the city of Tokyo, with a work of 100m²; ministries, such as the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of National Education and the Ministry of Health.
Since 2004, Guillaume Bottazzi has been represented by the Itsutsuji gallery. This major gallery in Japan allowed him to win with several artistic commissions. She discovered artists such as Simon Hantaï, Pierre Soulages, Yayoi Kusama, Ay-o, Guillaume Bottazzi, but also introduced movements such as the Supports/Surfaces group, including Claude Viallat.
Guillaume Bottazzi’s official website: https://guillaume.bottazzi.org