Nada Pivetta

was born in in 1970, where she lives and works. In 1992 he graduated in at the Brera of Fine Arts in Milan. He is Professor of Urban and Territorial at of Fine Arts in Milan. In 2005 he designed the leading image of the XVII national FABI congress, the Italian Autonomous Banking Federation. In 2009 the Icaro sculpture is the Economia Brianza Award from the Chamber of Commerce Monza and Brianza; participates in the Cura e Speranza competition, held in Milan by Niguarda Hospital Maggiore: his work is selected and acquired in the hospital collection. In the same year she won the public prize at the competition Sculpture in the city, projects for Milan, organized by the Museo della Permanente. In 2010 she was invited to an artist residency in Shanghai by Winnie Wong of West Gallery. In 2011 his work was chosen, as an artist of Italian nationality, for the collection of Contemporary Art of the Central Bank of Luxembourg. Since 2010 she has been involved in a collaboration with Metropolitana Milanese Spa for a project of her own design, called "Arte sotto Milano", for the redevelopment of new metropolitan spaces through the sculpture of young artists. Recently his work "Nulli Certa Domus" was placed in the first nucleus of a public collection at the Idroscalo in Milan. In 2105 she was invited by the director Maria Fratelli of the Studio of the Municipality of Milan to hold a personal exhibition and the monograph "Substantia" was presented to her, subsequently presented at the Museo del 900 in Milan. In 2017 he published the book "in Surface" dedicated to public sculpture in Milan from 2000 to 2016, with the support of the Francesco Messina Museum and the Municipality of Milan. From 2018 he collaborates and exhibits at the Italian Cultural Institute in Osaka. In 2019 she was invited by the Municipality of Milan to create a large sculpture for the city of Chengdu (China) as part of the project of public relations between friends City in the world. Currently Nada Pivetta is engaged in the creation of a floor sculpture, for the removal of architectural barriers, for the Church of S. Sisto, home of the Francesco Messina Museum in Milan.