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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Eugenio Azzola: The Geometry of Emotional Resonance
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Eugenio Azzola: The Geometry of Emotional Resonance

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 25 May 2026 14:24
Published 25 May 2026
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Eugenio Azzola: The Architecture of Open Resonance

Azzola’s paintings emerged after years of observation and incubation, almost as though they had been silently forming beneath the surface of his other disciplines. Early experiments involved small figures sketched in notebooks and watercolor studies, but over time he began developing a highly distinctive process centered on tape, layering, cutting, and removal. His works are constructed through woven bands arranged on boards, often stabilized with fiberglass mesh and enhanced with oil paint, resin, silicone, graphite, or metallic elements. The procedure combines precision with unpredictability. Sections are masked, peeled away, rebuilt, and transformed through light and texture until entirely new spatial relationships emerge. This method is especially visible in East Fence, a monumental work whose creation process occupied two months and involved repeated stages of weaving, cutting, filling, masking, and illuminating.

The resulting paintings exist somewhere between abstraction and landscape. Geometric structures resemble skylines, fences, rivers, weather systems, or distant architectural formations, yet they resist fixed interpretation. Works such as Division Four, The Fields of Joy V, Shadow Boxer IX, and The End of the Worlds suggest emotional states more than literal scenes. Light appears to pulse beneath the surface, while layered bands create rhythms that feel almost musical. Azzola often speaks about searching not for provocation or conceptual spectacle, but for what he calls “open resonance.” Rather than imposing a message, he wants the work to remain available to the viewer’s internal frequency. Beauty, atmosphere, and emotional vibration become more important than explanation.

This approach also reflects his skepticism toward overly rigid conceptual systems in contemporary art. Azzola acknowledges that invention alone is insufficient and that originality has become increasingly elusive within a long historical continuum. Instead of attempting revolution, he focuses on creating works with inner harmony between form and content. He follows intuition, chance, and unconscious processes during creation, allowing the painting itself to guide decisions. The works in OpenResonance arise from “putting and removing,” adapting continuously to the flow of the image as it develops. That openness gives the paintings an unusual emotional elasticity. They can appear meditative, tense, luminous, melancholic, or ecstatic depending on the viewer’s state of mind, creating encounters that remain fluid rather than fixed.

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