Close Menu
  • News
  • Stocks
  • Bonds
  • Commodities
  • Collectables
    • Art
    • Classic Cars
    • Whiskey
    • Wine
  • Trading
  • Alternative Investment
  • Markets
  • More
    • Economy
    • Money
    • Business
    • Personal Finance
    • Investing
    • Financial Planning
    • ETFs
    • Equities
    • Funds

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest markets and assets news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending Now

Ukraine gives its troops a handbook on protecting cultural property – The Art Newspaper

July 8, 2026

Seven organic Sauvignon Blanc for summer sipping

July 8, 2026

UK IPO proceeds increase 215% in early sign of revival

July 8, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
The Asset ObserverThe Asset Observer
Newsletter
LIVE MARKET DATA
  • News
  • Stocks
  • Bonds
  • Commodities
  • Collectables
    • Art
    • Classic Cars
    • Whiskey
    • Wine
  • Trading
  • Alternative Investment
  • Markets
  • More
    • Economy
    • Money
    • Business
    • Personal Finance
    • Investing
    • Financial Planning
    • ETFs
    • Equities
    • Funds
The Asset ObserverThe Asset Observer
Home»Art Market
Art Market

Lucia Di Luciano, Italian Painter Whose Abstractions Anticipated Digital Futures, Dies at 93

News RoomBy News RoomJanuary 5, 2026
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Lucia Di Luciano, an Italian painter associated with the Arte Programmata movement of the 1960s who only recently gained wider recognition, died this past weekend. Her death was announced by her Milan gallery, 10 A.M. Art, which did not specify a cause. Many Italian publications reported that she was 93 years old.

Di Luciano is known mainly for her abstractions of the 1960s, which are often composed of gridded black and white patterns. She made them entirely by hand, but she worked with such precision that they appear today as though they were made using computers, which were not yet widely available to the public during the 1960s. Only when standing up close to these works does one notice the areas where Di Luciano’s paint diverges ever so slightly from her predetermined compositions.

Unlike many artists of her era, Di Luciano did not only work in oil. She embraced house paint and acrylic, both of which were considered “low” or délcassé at the time.

Her paintings of the mid-’60s made her one of the leading figures associated with Arte Programmata, a movement that has often been positioned as an Italian response to the Op art pouring in from the US and England. The movement’s purveyors used the aesthetics of computers to consider how systems of orderliness are formed and broken down. Lindsay Caplan, an art historian who wrote a book on the movement in 2022, has written that the Arte Programmata was inherently political because it was about “individual freedom in relation to systematic constraints.”

Born in 1933 in Syracuse, Italy, Di Luciano attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome during the ’50s. While she was a student there, she met the artist Giovanni Pizzo, who later became her husband. Together, they took part in avant-garde groups such as Gruppo 63. They remained together, living in Rome until 2022, when Pizzo died.

Di Luciano described her career during the ’60s as an uphill battle, for she had chosen a profession that was still unkind to women. To supplement her artistic practice, she also opened a clothing store called Mondo Giovane, where she sold Perspex purses and plastic miniskirts that she designed.

Lucia Di Luciano, Untitled, 1964.

Courtesy the artist and Lovay Fine Arts

Though she painted for nearly eight decades, the international art world did not take note until 2022, when Di Luciano figured in the main exhibition of the Venice Biennale, curated by Cecilia Alemani. She appeared in a section called “Technologies of Enchantment,” which focused on how Italian women active during the postwar era had looked to computers as a means of envisioning other worlds.

After the Biennale, Di Luciano figured in “Electric Dreams: Art and Technology Before the Internet,” a Tate Modern exhibition that opened in 2024. Her art began to appear in fairs such as Frieze Masters and Independent 20th Century, and at galleries such as Herald St., which mounted Di Luciano’s first London show last year. Maxxi, a contemporary art museum in Rome, is currently organizing a retrospective that is set to open in 2027.

While Di Luciano remains best known for her austere abstractions of the 1960s, she wound up introducing color to her gridded paintings during the 1970s. By the end of her career, she had begun working in a very different mode altogether. Recent works shown by Lovay Fine Arts gallery at Independent featured rows of brushy swoops of paint, evincing an embrace of entropy that was not always present in her earlier work.

Whether or not the rest of the world was looking, Di Luciano continued to paint daily. “My thoughts are all
on the surfaces of my paintings,” Di Luciano said in 2022 in an interview with Konfekt, which reported that she was 89 at the time. “To stop working would have brought my mind to a halt and probably my life as well.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Ukraine gives its troops a handbook on protecting cultural property – The Art Newspaper

The Photographer Who Bridged Haute Couture and Humanism

Pro-Palestinian Cultural Workers Call for Strike Over US Ambassador’s Visit to Venice

Fundación Kahlo Launches $50,000 Prize for Emerging Mexican Artists

Check Out the Art Behind the Scenes of Loro Piana’s Fall/Winter 2026 Ad Campaign

Denmark’s Louisiana Museum Announces Remedios Varo Exhibition in Fall 2026

Phillips Posts $507 M. in First Half of 2026 as Watch Business Drives 60% Jump in Auction Sales

Our books editor dips into some recent art-historical fiction – The Art Newspaper

Massimiliano Gioni Named Director of New York’s New Museum

Recent Posts
  • Ukraine gives its troops a handbook on protecting cultural property – The Art Newspaper
  • Seven organic Sauvignon Blanc for summer sipping
  • UK IPO proceeds increase 215% in early sign of revival
  • Rioja Report 2026: Five producers at the top of their game
  • Partner Insight: The Future is Now for Investing in Economic Security

Subscribe to Newsletter

Get the latest markets and assets news and updates directly to your inbox.

Editors Picks

Seven organic Sauvignon Blanc for summer sipping

July 8, 2026

UK IPO proceeds increase 215% in early sign of revival

July 8, 2026

Rioja Report 2026: Five producers at the top of their game

July 8, 2026

Partner Insight: The Future is Now for Investing in Economic Security

July 8, 2026

Partner Insight: Federated Hermes MDT: How we seek to enhance our alpha model

July 8, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
© 2026 The Asset Observer. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.