Agostino Iacurci really impressed with scale and humor in Atlanta for Living Walls this past summer and now he has taken his outsized geometric illustrated forms to Rome to participate Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential series. Light hearted, sure-footed, and hand-controlled, his climbing figures invite you to help tell the story, to be pleased and bemused while contemplating the balanced ying/yang of their positions.
Whatever your reading of this composition is, it is precisely this kind of intimate experience one can have with public work that the series intends to highlight. With a smart palette and love for a flatly dimensional scene, Iacurci places just the right amount of exactitude in his choices to let you know that as fun as this work looks, he’s not playing.
Special thanks to photographer Giorgio Coen Cagli for sharing these exclusive shots of Agostino at work with BSA readers.
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
Agostin0 Iacurci for Wunderkammern’s Public and Confidential project in Rome. (photo © Giorgio Coen Cagli)
<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA
Please note: All content including images and text are © BrooklynStreetArt.com, unless otherwise noted. We like sharing BSA content for non-commercial purposes as long as you credit the photographer(s) and BSA, include a link to the original article URL and do not remove the photographer’s name from the .jpg file. Otherwise, please refrain from re-posting. Thanks!
<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
Happy Holidays to all of you charming and sparkling BSA readers! It’s been a raucous sleigh ride with you and we thank everyone most sincerely for your support and participation this year. A sort o...
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities. Now screening:1. REFLECTIONS: Guido Van Helten and The Wellington Dam Mural2. Mear One in Los Angeles via Bird ...
Berlin is slaughtered with Street Art, graffiti, stickers. It appears in so many areas and neighborhoods that you feel like you are being spoken to by artists everywhere you go, not just adverti...
Our founding myths, our myths of origin, contain the DNA of a cultures’ existence and from that story all developments that occur are measured. When we cloak our present day with the origin myth we im...
JPS is crashing again here in Berlin – this time we found him on the steps of the Urban Nation museum with his miniature stencil works that are tragicomic. The UK street artist planted many of th...