The Geca Onlus Association has been speaking to and for the hearts of people for over 20 years. There are special hearts, more fragile than others, but no less fighting. Geca has a dream in the drawer, which is about to become reality: To enhance these hearts, each in its own special way, through the extraordinary power of contemporary art.

The first project is the illustration of artist Stefano Reolon, who has tackled a rather serious problem, developing it in his own way, in a creative and sparkling, pop way: speaking the typical language of the new generations

Halfway between an artist’s book and a comic strip, this project was conceived as an illustrated story in continuous evolution, through

which to start telling many unique and exciting stories.

In this way, art becomes life, mingles with it, and enters schools, sports centres, associations, and hospitals in the city, involving the new generations in particular and making them participants in a path of collective awareness and sharing.

This project was made possible thanks to the fruitful collaboration between artist STEFANO REOLON, who took care of all the graphics, and Dr. BARBARA BAUCE, Dr. VIVIANA MARCON and Dr. FABIANA MICHELUZZI, who provided the necessary medical and psychological advice and support for the drafting of the texts and dialogues.

THE ARTIST
Stefano Reolon is an eclectic and ‘ingenious’ artist from Padua, with a multifaceted and sensitive temperament, and an energy that can be felt in the vision of his works.

Painter, draughtsman, set designer, costume designer, photographer, over time he has been able to mix the diversity of languages and put all these techniques together in an artistic path that has led him, after his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Venice, to work for very important theatre and television studios such as the RAI in Rome, to design for the ‘Moulin Rouge’ in Paris and to teach History of Contemporary Art.

He currently devotes himself mainly to his greatest passion, painting: contemporary painting with references to the Italian Renaissance and Baroque heritage.