Dina
Cangi has got the chance to cultivate her inclination to painting
just following her natural gift. She has believed in her instinctive
feeling for composition, in her great sensibility towards chromatic
harmonies and tone-colour values, in her versatility in using
different materials, from the most traditional and tested to
the most heteroclite and experimental ones. Anyway, dominating
everything with a gesturality always under control which allows
her to create, almost plastically, with an excellent ability
and with clear-cut brush strokes, strongly evocative images.
All this thanks to her artistical training, to a rigorous probation
which allowed her to free herself from every kind of uncertainty
in order to introduce herself to the public with a mature and
complete language. (...)
She has left a deviated surrealism recalling Max Ernst and delicate
pastel tonalities and she has innervated her way of painting
with terrestrial impulses, bringing "materica" paintings,
which are combined with informal tendencies. (...)
Substance for Dina Cangin even having a main role, does not
go beyond the sign. On the contrary, it is a means used to describe
a personal emotion in order to filtrate an image caught from
outside and make it of her own. In which way? Depriving it from
its original substance and filling it with another one of different
nature. The phaenomenic realities, the every day realities ar
just an excuse, a simple hint for her composition. And the artist
is ready to fill it all with herself. So, her subjects are always
identifiable, but at the end you can ask yuorself wheather they
are images described like dead natures or they are just similar
to them, or if they are actually oneiric reflexes of them, or
if they are collective archetypal iconographies searched in
the depth of our unconoscious.
Substance as a means. Substance that is enhanced to its most
hidden preciousness, thanks to the technical skill that the
artist has succeded in reaching because of her experimentalism.
An experimentalism which goal is to obtain pleasure, almost
tactile, that you can catch from the curls of a piece of paper
or from the wrinkledness of supports, in a dark stroke of the
brush, or in a fast golden flash. And it is in those golden
flashes, which pulse under the pigments, that the painter seems
to have grasped the vital breath, the real soul of her paintings.
The beautiful soul. The spirit that informs of its presence
all the visual manifestations, primigenial, of the individual
human being and of all mankind; and of which every single painting
can be a different personification. A beautiful soul, I repeat.
Because, at the end, it is always to beauty that the painter
makes reference. To the intrinsical fascination of substance
that she can reveal to us, working at different steps, with
consecutive glazes, starting from dark bases to lighter and
lighter shades of colour, in a world precious, creating in this
way a sort of cathartic process.