5 Italian female artists to keep an eye on Italian, talented and destined to be successful

Their names are Rachele Amadori, Nicoletta SaraccoGiulia SollaiEmma Allegretti e Elena Salmistraro. They come from different regions, backgrounds and styles. But they share many things: all of them are Italian, young and talented. They are illustrators, designers, painters, true poets of images, storytellers capable of inspiring emotions with their works.

Save these names because, once you learn about these artists, you can't help but fall in love with them and their unique art.

 

Rachele Amadori

Photo credit Simone Biavati
Liquid by Rachele Amadori
Photo credit Sara Gentile
Res Divina by Rachele Amadori
Res Divina by Rachele Amadori
Res Divina by Rachele Amadori
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Elena Salmistraro is definitely one of the most original names of the new generation of Italian designers. Milanese, born in 1983, after a three-year degree in Fashion Design and studies in Industrial Design at the Milan Polytechnic, she turned the monsters she drew as a child to exorcise her fears into real ironic, funny and colorful artworks. She began her career with ceramics, then experimented with different forms and materials. The results of her eclectic creativity are the panda Bernardo, the throne Lisetta, Micky Mouse in ceramic, the sideboard Polifemo, the Mata&Grifo mirrors and the Primates collection, the famous monkey-shaped vases, born from a mash-up of inspirations between the African Cercopithecines and Sicilian Teste di Moro. What is common to these projects created with major companies such as Vitra, Lavazza, Alessi, Bosa, De Castelli or Lithea? They are all objects designed to move, items with a soul, which have the power not only to elevate the style of our homes, but also to communicate with people.