| Mauro’s work unites Pop aesthetics with social comment, addressing some of the most pressing and difficult issues in today’s society in a way that is subtle and accessible, without being trite, shocking or obscure. Mauro is an artist connected; he sees the bigger picture and world affairs and his finger on the pulse of contemporary society.
Mauro lives in London with his wife PR Director Lorena Perucchetti.  : 
  Solo Exhibitions:2013  The Power of Love, Madison Gallery La Jolla, CA, USA
 2013  Reflection in a Golden Eye, Galerie Bel-Air, Geneva, Switzerland
 2013  Unicum, Absolute Art Gallery, Knokke, Belgium
 2013  Unicum, Halcyon Gallery, London, UK
 2013  Hip Pop Art, Ode To Art Gallery, Art Stage Singapore
 2012  Warhol/Mauro, Halcyon Gallery, London, UK
 2012  Sem Art Gallery, (Princess Grace Academy), Monaco
 2012  Principality of Monaco (Barclays Wealth Management Bank)
 2011  Art Paris (Grand Palais) Absolute Art Gallery, Belgium
 2010  Galerie Bel-Air, Geneva, Switzerland
 2010  Modern Heroes, Hip-Pop-Art & Daily News, Halcyon Gallery, London
 2009  APOPALYPTIC, Halcyon Gallery, London, UK
 2008  Absolute Art Gallery, Knokke, Belgium
 2008  Galerie Bertin-Toublanc, Paris, France
 2007  Blast, Galerie Semmingsen, Olso, Norway
 2006  Blast, Galerie Bertin-Toublanc, Paris, France
 2006  Blast, Beaux Arts, London, UK
 2005  Cloning and Religion, The Atkinson Gallery, Millfield, Somerset, UK
 2004  Cloning and Religion, Beaux Arts, London, UK
 Group  Exhibitions:
 2013  Imago Gallery, Palm Desert, CA, USA
 2013  Baker Sponder Gallery, Miami, Florida, USA
 2013  Madison Gallery, La Jolla, CA, USA
 2012  Sem Art Gallery, Monaco
 2012  Ode To Art Gallery, Singapore
 2012  Galerie Bel-Air, Sardinia, Italy
 2012  Galerie des Lices, Saint Tropez, France
 2011  Art-Elysee (Salon d’ Art Contemporain), Paris, France
 2011  Galerie des Lices, Saint Tropez, France
 2011  Absolute Art Gallery, Knokke, Belgium
 2011  Galerie Bel-Air, Geneva, Switzerland
 2008  Galerie Bertin-Toublanc, Miami, USA
 2008  London Art Fair, London, UK
 2007  Beaux Arts, London, UK
 2007  Rudolf Budja Galerie, Salzburg, Austria
 2006  Sense and Sensuality (Blind Art 1st Prize), London, UK
 2006  London Art Fair, London, UK
 2005  Beaux Arts, London, UK
 2005  British Art Fair, London, UK
 2005  Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition, London, UK
 2005  London Art Fair, London, UK
 2003  Art Palm Beach, Florida, USA
 2003  Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition, London, UK
 2002  Blue Gallery, London, UK
 Public Collections:
 Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation "The Art of Saving A Life"
 The Welcome Trust, London, UK
 The Gateway Foundation, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
 Plaza Singapura, Singapore
 Public Installations:
 Marble Arch, London, UK
 Place du Louvre, Paris, France
 Villa Borghese Roma Biennale, Rome, Italy
 Boca Raton Resort, Florida, USA
 Plaza Singapura, Singapore
 Essays:
 2014  Peter Frank, essay Hip Pop Art, Los Angeles, USA
 2010  Sue Hubbard, essay Hip Pop Art, Daily News, Modern Heroes
 2010  Richard Cork, Meeting Mauro Perucchetti
 2009  Michael Bracewell, essay APOPALYPTIC
 2006  Edward Lucie-Smith, Blast essay, Beaux Arts, UK
 2004  Elspeth Moncrieff, essay, Cloning and Religion, Beaux Arts, UK
 Publications:
 2013  BLOUIN ARTINFO Magazine
 2012  Lodown Magazine, Rider of the APOPALYPSE
 2012  Fluoro Magazine, Jelly Baby, Bullets and Condoms
 2012  Singapore TATLER Interview
 2012  SWAROVSKI GEMSVISIONS “Cool clinical”
 2012  Edelweiss Magazine, Geneva, Switzerland
 2012  Sculpture magazine
 2011  Eyes magazine, Geneva, Switzerland
 2011  Robb Report magazine, China
 2011  Idol Magazine Interview
 2011  Wall Street Journal interview
 2010  Vanity Fair, Italy
 2010  The New Heroes, Modern Heroes interview
 2010  MNENIE Russian Magazine Interview
 2010  AGITPOP magazine
 2010  BBC News “Jelly Baby sculpture displayed London Marble Arch.”
 2010  GQ Magazine
 2009  Blueprint Magazine Interview
 2008  Tate Modern newsletter “Apopalyptic”
 2008  Florida Inside Out magazine, Miami
 2007  Where magazine, Miami
 2007  The Financial Times
 2006  The Tablet
 2006  The Daily Telegraph
 2006  The Times
 2006  Cimaise magazine France “Blast Interview.”
 2005  The Times magazine
 2005  TATLER Magazine London
 2005  Le Point magazine France
 2005  Le Journal des Arts France
 2005  The Evening Standard magazine
 2004  The Tablet “What the cross will bear”
 Books:
 2014  From Marble to Flesh The Biography of Michelangelo David, The Florentine Press
 2011  The Art of Medicine, Wellcome Collection
 2011  A Guide for the incurably curious, Wellcome Collection
 2011 Skull Style: Neon camouflage: Skulls in contemporary art, Farameh Media
   
 The Melinda and Bill Gates foundation recentlyasked Mauro to produce a special commission
 artwork for their cause Art of Saving A Life
   Photoquelle/credit: Lorena Perucchetti - PR Director / Art Consultant      THE  U.S. MESS: MAURO PERUCCHETTIAND AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL
 By Peter Frank
 Mauro Perucchetti’s preoccupation with the paraphernalia of Pop – or,
 perhaps more accurately, the Pop-ization of paraphernalia – ultimately
 must alight upon the United States of America. This country, after all, is
 the original, purest, and most consistent source of Pop artifacture and
 Pop sensibility.
 Actually, make that lower-case “pop”; the capitalized version of the label
 speaks of an art movement, and, while American Pop Art made a
 profound and lasting impact on artistic practice around the world, it did
 not represent the American soul. The work of Warhol, Lichtenstein, et
 al, arguably found American social discourse as foreign as did its English
 and Continental counterparts; it looked at pop-culture phenomena with
 the same longing, ecstatic confusion, and eros-tinged sense of mystery
 that motivated the Europeans, even while surrounded by the stuff.
 American Pop, and European, made “art” out of that which was trying
 so hard not to be art.
 The Italian-born, London-based Perucchetti addresses America the
 Popular from the same partly-estranged vantage as his Pop forebears,
 American and non-American alike. But these days, everyone – everyone
 –  is less estranged from popular culture than anyone was fifty years ago.
 The  globe-girdling dominance of American culture and society is
 complete, after all. Abetted by social media and the World Wide Web,
 unimpeded by opposing nations or cultures (which now rely on
 America’s existence for their own anti-American potency), Americulture
 is world culture. America’s tastes are the world’s tastes (even if you can
 get wine at McDonald’s in some countries). America’s problems are the
 world’s problems.
 This is the premise on which Perucchetti’s collection of objects aimed
 at  American peccadilloes is based. Part of his “Hip Pop Art” series,
 these delirious elaborations on American gun culture, police aggression,
 patriotic mythology, and money worship manifest less a scolding tone
 than one of awe. A sense of incredulity filters through these over-thetop,
 delicious fabrications; the patterns of repetition that characterize
 so many of them seem like mantras on material things. The parodic tone
 that inflects these grotesque transformations of ordinary objects into
 menacing tropes may begin pointedly, but gets blunted by the sadness,
 nervous exhaustion, and even nostalgia that hover around them. These
 reimagined, reformulated, repurposed objects, no matter how benign
 any particular one might seem, project power – and, even more, project
 the tristesse of power and the anguish of America’s unique task: it seeks
 to rule the world while increasingly unable to rule itself.
 Why doesn’t Perucchetti pick on some other benighted country? Lord
 knows, the world is full of them. But none engulfs the entire earth with
 itself as the United States does. When China takes over, Perucchetti will
 doubtless skewer the resurgent Middle Kingdom with doting satire. In
 the  meantime, he takes aim at America – an immense target, to be sure,
 but able to swallow most arrows aimed at it. Indeed, these sculptures
 do not mock the country, they mock – and at the same time marvel at
 –  various behaviors and presumptions that make modern – or, if you
 would, post-modern – America what it is nowadays.
 “Don’t  Mess With The U.S.,” Mauro Perucchetti’s ultimate object in this
 group – and the name of the group itself – announces. Far from echoing
 the defiant cry of the American jingo, the declaration provides a yet more
 dire and forlorn warning: the U.S. is messing with itself, and it doesn’t
 need your help.
 Los Angeles, January 2015
   Contact: Lorena Perucchetti ( hip-pop-art.com )PR manager/Art consultant
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