Ilaria Vinci
Introverse (5), 2025
Watercolor and pencil on wood
Signed and dated verso
Image dimensions:
91 x 95.5 cm / 35.8 x 37.6 inches
Framed dimensions:
92.8 x 97.3 cm / 36.5 x 38.3 inches
91 x 95.5 cm / 35.8 x 37.6 inches
Framed dimensions:
92.8 x 97.3 cm / 36.5 x 38.3 inches
B-IVINCI-.25-0002
Ilaria Vinci’s (b. 1991; Lives and works in Zurich) sculptural works and watercolours use layered, concentric forms to build self-contained spatial systems. These structures echo natural processes of growth, peeling,...
Ilaria Vinci’s (b. 1991; Lives and works in Zurich) sculptural works and watercolours use layered, concentric forms to build self-contained spatial systems. These structures echo natural processes of growth, peeling, and accumulation, presenting interiority as something revealed gradually through material depth.
Her approach treats sculpture as a means to articulate psychological or emotional space. She constructs small environments with distinct internal logics, encouraging viewers to consider how feeling, memory, or imagination might inhabit layered forms. Vinci’s work is marked by a sensitivity to texture, rhythm, and the quiet unfolding of form.
Vinci’s work has been included in solo and group exhibitions at Kunsthaus Zurich (2024); Kunsthalle Zurich, (2023): Museion, Bolzano (2023): Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich (2023); MACRO Museum, Rome (2022); Fondazione Sandretto, Turin (2021) and Kunsthalle Sankt Gallen (2021), among others.
Her approach treats sculpture as a means to articulate psychological or emotional space. She constructs small environments with distinct internal logics, encouraging viewers to consider how feeling, memory, or imagination might inhabit layered forms. Vinci’s work is marked by a sensitivity to texture, rhythm, and the quiet unfolding of form.
Vinci’s work has been included in solo and group exhibitions at Kunsthaus Zurich (2024); Kunsthalle Zurich, (2023): Museion, Bolzano (2023): Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich (2023); MACRO Museum, Rome (2022); Fondazione Sandretto, Turin (2021) and Kunsthalle Sankt Gallen (2021), among others.