Guillaume Moschini
1970
(FRANCE)
FRENCH
The abstract artist Guillaume Moschini balances an art practice in Nîmes and a professorship of drawing at the ESMA school in Montpellier, France.
Moschini infuses his research of the masters of color field painting with his own contemporary methodologies and transparent properties.
Education
Learning from the artists known for the Supports/Surfaces Movement, at the School of Beaux-Arts in Nîmes, Moschini was mentored by the internationally recognized Claude Viallat, Patrick Saytour, and Vincent Bioules.

Technique
In 1964, the art critic, Clement Greenberg at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, titled color field painting as Post-Painterly Abstraction.
The focus for these artists in the 60s was a departure from an association with feelings, spirituality or expressive brushwork.
Much like Helen Frankenthaler, Moschini’s work depends on process: unprimed, raw canvas, a diluted pigment (mixed inks, acrylics, and paint thinners), and the unconscious phenomenon that occurs through the process of art making.
He explains this obsession:
“When I work, the question of what I am going to paint no longer arises. I only think about new colors, overlays, and transparency effects.”
In his organized studio, he constructs compositions of color, transparent tints, overlays and shapes. Liquid pigments melt into the raw canvas with precarious intention. Meditation on the proper tools, balance of color, form and the flow of material is his strategy. Moschini’s palette is reinvented per series, sometimes vibrant and sometimes muted.


Exhibitions
Moschini's work has been extensively exhibited in galleries and art fairs in France.
Galleries
See Galerie, Paris, France
Galerie Éric Linard, La Garde Adhémar, France
Galerie Oniris, Rennes, France
Galerie Jean-Paul Barrès, Toulouse, France
Galerie From Point to Point, Nimes, France
Galerie Alma, Montpellier, France
Photo credit: Jean-Pierre Loubat