
Galliano’s work is characterized by recurring series. He is fascinated by cities, specifically houses and their inhabitants. Everywhere he has worked or exhibited, he has quickly captured the people, houses, and streets in sketches, or nowadays with his I-Phone, to later work on them in his studio. His birthplace Pinerolo, Turin, Rome but also New York, Tel Aviv and Berlin all served as inspiration for his work.
In the summer of 2015, Galliano worked in the studio of Livingstone Projects in Berlin. The large work on paper, Berlin, and the drawing installations Kreuzberg Constellations and Stars, which he made there, formed the center of his exhibition Berlin Constellations at the Livingstone Gallery in The Hague later that year.
His series of houses and streets are named Larve. We grow up in our houses, populate our cities, and fly out to other houses, other cities, other countries, leaving our traces everywhere. These traces are what Galliano wants to capture, as they make each city unique. The patterns we form as humans in the city, Galliano sees as Constellations. Crowds of people at concerts, demonstrations, or migrations, he depicts as abstract dots on the canvas, like constellations in the universe.
Galliano (Pinerolo, 1961) lives and works in Turin. Without any formal academic training, he started exhibiting internationally in the early 1990s. In 1996, he made his American debut at the renowned Annina Nosei Gallery in New York. His work was also part of the museum presentation at the 9th Biennale of Havana in 2006 and the Italian pavilion at the 53rd Biennale of Venice in 2009.
Monograph Daniele Galliano, Paintings 1993-1995, Skira Editore Milan i.s.m. Livingstone Gallery in The Hague, Galleria in Arco Turin, and Annina Nosei Gallery New York.
www.ftn-books.com has several Galliano items available.















































































