Marc Vinciguerra is a parisian artist living in America. He is currently exhibiting a monumental statue in Venice during the Biennale of architecture in a show that he is sharing with Richard Meier ( Pritzker Price and architect of the Getty Museum ) among other artists. His installation in Venice has been qualified as ‘’extraordinary’’ by Fine Art Connoisseur Magazine. Marc Vinciguerra has also a big following with philosophers and writers as he won The Alpine Fellowship Visual Prize in 2014, visionnary prize that tries to reconnect art and philosophy hosted by philosopher and BBC host (Why Beauty Matters) Sir Roger Scruton. Marc Vinciguerra is also a lecturer. He has been giving lecture in Universities, at the Foundation Cini in Venice and has written articles on the future of Art. He has been invited by the European Cultural Center in Venice who showed the sculptures of Yoko Ono. His work is an attempt to break the wall that separate traditional art and contemporary art. Marc Vinciguerra reunites both of them with the skill of a renaissance artist and the thoughts of a philosopher from the twenty one century. In an exciting new way he transforms figurative art into conceptual installations. When the curators greet the visitors in the Venetian Palace where his monumental Triptych is installed in front of the grand canal in Venice they describe his work as figurative installations. Marc Vinciguerra fuses the past and the future together to create a richer future for art. The catalogue of his last exhibition has been published at 12000 copies.