Andrea Gallotti Italia, b. 1993
The painterly gesture of the artist is based on repetition through which he tries to reflect on a very simple, almost childlike gesture, that changes imperceptibly from one painting to another. There is a strong personal need to find an alternative path to the difficulties he perceives in our society, which is dynamic, fast-paced, and overloaded with stimuli, tending to equate what is not completely different, overlooking the details.
"Every action is unique and should not be generalized and thus diminished, but rather appreciated precisely because of its uniqueness," states Gallotti. During creation, the artist adopts a meditative attitude, trying to establish a new perspective with what surrounds him. For some years now, this "meditative gesture" has helped him to concentrate, and from this concentration, the idea freely emerges, leading him to the completion of the work. The observer, invited to proceed with a slowness matching that of the artist, is accompanied on a journey that becomes personal and free in its uniqueness. I believe this is the essence of Andrea's message. Nothing is static, everything is becoming, the important thing is to try to grasp the slightest transitions and movements as he does.
Andrea Gallotti was born in Monza in 1993 and currently lives and works in Milan. An experimental painter, Gallotti has developed a distinctive approach to painting, characterized by a highly gestural and emotional brushstroke. His artistic training began at the Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, where he honed his technique and vision, and subsequently expanded into an international career that has seen him work and exhibit around the world.
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Il fragile divenire
5 - 27 Nov 2025For the first time, Andrea Gallotti presents a project that organically intertwines his painting and sculptural research, transforming them into a single, coherent, and pulsating language. The exhibition, curated by Livia Ruberti in collaboration with Orma Art, is hosted within the spaces of Galleria della Chiusa, a place of expansion and experimentation with collaborating galleries. The selection of works offers some perspectives on Gallotti’s ongoing exploration of the complexity of the sign function and its infinite possibilities for variation, proposing an intimate and rigorous dialogue between matter, gesture, and time.Read more
The exhibition brings together a canvas that reflects on the “grammar of the gesture,” five marble sculptures, and nine glass works, all created in the past year. Together, these works form a visual constellation that investigates the sense of becoming, the inevitability of change, and the complexity contained within repetition. The marble, with its millennia-old stratifications, evokes a geological and meditative sense of time.
In Gallotti’s works, its compactness opens up to an unexpected sense of lightness: the pictorial gesture becomes the matrix of the sculptural form, and the material, in turn, adapts to the artist’s gesturality, embracing rhythm and tension. In this reciprocity, marble seems to become a living body, capable of conveying the dialogue between permanence and becoming. The natural veins of the slabs, originating from different parts of the world, are not just marks of the stone but metaphors of unique and fragile identities—traces of sedimented life.
Next to marble, glass represents the threshold: a transparent, sensitive, and rigorous matter that allows us to see beyond, while imposing a limit. Gallotti approaches it as a field of extreme synthesis, where two colors and a single gesture suffice to evoke a poetic tension between presence and absence. The mark, traced on the back, reveals itself from the front depending on light and viewer movement, creating a continuous perceptual play. The glazed surface, with its rich yet calm tones, gives the works a sense of peace and introspection, transforming viewing into an active experience—the purest and most essential way of engaging with the aesthetic act.
In Gallotti’s practice, the gesture does not illustrate an idea; it generates it. It is the material itself, in its resistance and response, that guides the form and defines the boundaries of the visible. Thus, the work becomes an act of attention, of exposure to time and its transformations. Repetition is never automatism but a conscious exercise: each time, the gesture renews itself, discovering its own difference, building a language where action becomes thought and matter becomes body.
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Trame di Memoria
4 - 13 Apr 2025Dal 4 al 13 aprile, in occasione della Milano Art Week e della Milano Design Week, Orma ART e D’Segni presentano la mostra collettiva 'Trame di Memoria' presso Via dei...Read more -
Identità e Differenza
Andrea Gallotti 9 Jan 2025While in equality diversity disappears, in identity diversity is revealed. For Heidegger, identity is not confused with equality. The world we live in is characterized by representative categories that we...Read more


