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  "Carlo Maria Mariani is an avant-garde artist, but of a unique cast: he 
        believes in classical beauty, beauty as an infinitely repeatable ideology 
        which he has decided - with exquisite timing - to repeat, in order to 
        give art the solid center of gravity it seems to have lost. Beauty is 
        always radical, that is, it is the esthetic root of art. At the time of 
        his return to beauty - well before the Transvanguardia movement - avant-garde 
        art was indifferent to it..."
 - Donald Kuspit, Idiosyncratic Identities: 
        Artists at the End of the Avante-Garde  "(Mariani's) work is not merely pretty pictures; it also exerts a 
        considerable appeal to the intellect through a set of references to Modern 
        and Classical motifs and styles which interact in a variety of controlled 
        significations."
 - Thomas McEvilley, The Exile's 
        Return: Toward a Redefinition of Painting for the Post-Modern Era  "On large scale, Carlo Maria Mariani creates enigmatic scenes of 
        classical nudes juxtaposed with absurd details. His paintings are beautifully 
        conceived...[he] situates his elegant Greco-Roman figures in ludicrous 
        and disturbing circumstances...The artist thus reveals his 'hand' in painted 
        artifice and once again startles us with the unforeseen."
 - Mary Schneider Enriquez, Artnews "In the 1960's, [Mariani's] art was influenced by both hyperrealism 
        and conceptualism: a decade later, Mariani began quoting from masterworks 
        of antiquity, a tendency that later evolved into his signature, exalted-eerie 
        style. For the mood of Mariani's pictures can be as cool as their allegorical 
        drama is high-pitched, sometimes exuding the hushed, airless
 atmosphere of classic surrealism."
 
 -Edward Gomez, Art & Antiques  "...Mariani conjures a sempiternal realm that exists parallel to 
        mundane reality and which is accessible through art, reverie and the imagination."
 - Gerard McCarthy, 
        Art in America
 
 "Communicating by means of a personal 
        iconographic system steeped in mythology and classical ideals. Mariani 
        fuses the past with the present in order to illuminate a sometimes unsettling, 
        but always exhilarating future. He evokes the hushed serenity of antiquity 
        and the cacophonous turbulence of modernism, which momentarily in the 
        paintings at least, have reached tentative accord...Mariani's aim is not 
        to reconstruct the ancient world, nor does he present a fragmentary view 
        of it, in the form of romantic moss-covered ruins and the like...He embraces 
        myth as a language which he finds best suited to express his most complex 
        emotions...For Mariani, myth is an attitude and response to the world 
        around him, rather than simply means to explicate or reiterate the lessons 
        of antiquity."
 - David Ebony, from the book, Carlo 
        Maria Mariani
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