<strong>Salvatore Mangione</strong>, known to the art world simply as <strong>Salvo</strong>, represents one of the most unique and metamorphic figures in the international art scene of the late 20th century. Born in Leonforte, Sicily, in 1947, Salvo spent his early childhood on the island before moving with his family to <strong>Turin</strong> in 1956. It was in the Piedmontese capital, a hotbed of new avant-garde movements, that the artist shaped his creative identity, oscillating between conceptual rigor and a highly personal rediscovery of figurative painting.
<strong>Early career and the Arte Povera movement</strong>
Salvo's artistic journey began in the late 1960s. 1968 was a pivotal year: after a trip to Paris during the height of the student protests, he returned to Turin and established deep ties with the leading figures of <strong>Arte Povera</strong>. He frequented artists such as Alighiero Boetti, Mario Merz, and Giuseppe Penone, sharing the same gallery space at Gian...