Buganvillea

Rampicante

In the Rampicante design, artist Antonio Barbieri translates natural organicity into a synthetic graphic language, merging formal analysis, technology, and poetic vision.
The pattern originates from 3D scans of real botanical elements, digitally reworked into structural filaments: stems, flowers, and buds intertwine in a filiform, ethereal, modular composition.

Here, nature is not represented but extracted and reinterpreted.
Each flower loses its physicality to become structure, visual rhythm, and abstract presence.
The result is a lightweight yet meticulously constructed pattern: it seems drawn in ink, with the same precision as old herbarium studies, yet it looks to the future through the rigor of 3D software.
This composition reinvents the relationship between natural and artificial, between ornament and algorithm, memory and simulation.
The design, apparently fragile, is in fact a complex network that unites decoration and narrative.

In this Rampicante Buganvillea edition, flower outlines are rendered in vibrant fluorescent violet, and stems in bright green, both floating on a luminous white background that enhances the optical effect.
The combination is unusual — botanical yet synthetic, organic yet digital — as if the surface were crossed by an electric nature grown in an artificial garden.
The sharp contrast between background and line, empty space and structure, makes this variant perfect for minimal yet impactful interiors, where decoration is subtle but iconic.

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