<strong>Mimmo Rotella</strong> (Catanzaro, 1918 – Milan, 2006) is universally recognized as one of the undisputed protagonists of 20th-century art, a radical innovator who transformed the urban fabric into poetic substance. His artistic research, centered on the deconstruction of advertising imagery, marked a turning point in the transition from Informel to European Pop Art, establishing him as the leading Italian exponent of <strong>Nouveau Réalisme</strong>. After studying at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, Rotella moved to Rome in 1945. His initial phase was marked by geometric-abstract experimentation, culminating in his first solo exhibition at the <strong>Galleria Chiurazzi</strong> in 1951. In the same year, thanks to a grant from the <strong>Fulbright Foundation</strong>, he traveled to the United States as an artist-in-residence at the University of Kansas City. This stay proved fundamental: contact with American Abstract Expressionism and the overseas cultural milieu stim...