Arcobaleno

On Monte Tamaro, art isn’t just something you look at from a distance: it’s something you experience! Along the Artistic path, the bronze sculpture “Arcobaleno” (Rainbow) invites you to a unique sensory experience.

Arcobaleno

The work is by Riccardo Cordero, a renowned sculptor born in 1942, whose monumental works can be found all over the world, from Turin to the Beijing Olympics.

Forget traditional statues and physically step into the heart of the work. Among its rigorous and abstract shapes, you will discover unprecedented perspectives, where the bronze is in dialogue with our mountains. Let your imagination run free, completing the suspended figures with your gaze, and discover how international art and nature can merge in an extraordinary embrace.

 

 

Figures of the sculpture

Sculpture's name:

Arcobaleno

Year:

1989

Artist:

Riccardo Cordero

Material: Bronze
Dimensions:

220x230x60 cm

Biography of the artist

Riccardo Cordero was born in 1942 in Alba in the province of Cuneo (Italy). In 1965 he graduated with honours in sculpture from the Albertina Academy of Fine Arts in Turin. He began his career as a teacher at the Liceo Artistico in Turin. He later held the chair of sculpture at the School of Sculpture at the same academy until 2002. Besides lecturing and teaching, he has always worked as a sculptor with a preference for metal, steel and bronze. From the 1970s onwards, his artistic activity increased nationally and internationally. Noteworthy among his many works are «Disarticolare un cerchio» (Disarticulating a circle) and «Chakra», both of which are exhibited in Turin, the city where Cordero creates and works. In 1993, he was asked by the Lookout Foundation in Pennsylvania, USA, to create a large iron work in the foundation’s sculpture park. Inspired by this experience, he enthusiastically resumed the design of scale works on this return to his homeland. 2005 marked a turning point in his career. He was invited to Guilin in China to create his first work in Corten steel entitled «Comet», which was installed in the Shanghai Sculpture Park. 2021, he was one of the winners of the competition launched in Beijing for the 2022 Winter Olympics and was commissioned to create the 17-metre high sculpture entitled «New ET».