
"At Il Bottaccio, the Relais & Châteaux located between the Apuan Alps and the Versilian coast, the work of Italian painter Sossio forms an exhibition integrated throughout the property, turning the into a cohesive and continuous artistic environment. The project places the Sossio Art Collection across corridors, salons, private suites, and transitional spaces, creating a steady visual presence that accompanies guests through the building's stone architecture and historic ."
"Sossio's career began in Naples between 1968 and 1972 during a formative period for Italian art, shaped by direct contact with figures of the New Neapolitan School such as Domenico Spinosa, Armando De Stefano, and Gianni Pisani. Their influence established the foundations of his gestural and material approach, later expanded through his collaboration with Elio D'Anna and the philosophical framework of the 'Creative Universe,' which shifted his practice toward introspection and metaphysical themes."
"At Il Bottaccio, the Italian painter's artistic evolution is conveyed through a placement strategy that treats the entire property as a continuous setting. Contemporary surfaces, gestures, and color fields interact with eighteenth-century stone, antique wood, and natural Tuscan light, producing a consistent dialogue. Suites function as small installations where the works integrate into the existing atmosphere, allowing guests to experience the art as part of their surroundings."
Il Bottaccio hosts a site-wide installation of Sossio's paintings that integrates art into corridors, salons, suites, and transitional spaces, creating a continuous visual presence throughout the stone-built Relais & Châteaux. Sossio's early training in Naples with New Neapolitan School figures informed his gestural, material approach, later deepened by collaboration with Elio D'Anna and the 'Creative Universe' philosophy toward introspective, metaphysical themes. Contemporary gestures, color fields, and surfaces converse with eighteenth-century stone, antique wood, and Tuscan light. Suites operate as intimate installations, allowing guests to encounter artworks as part of their surroundings and experience hospitality intertwined with artistic practice.
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
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