
An engineer in Art, bridging boundaries by blending Art and Science.
Adrien Di Fazio is an autodidact French artist sculptor. Born in Normandy, France, in 1993, the artist grew up with two passions: science and art. After graduating as an aerospace engineer, he subsequently pursued a conventional career, holding various corporate positions, all while searching for his artistic path.
Adrien is above all a creative mind with a strong inclination for intellectual stimulation. Since a young age, Adrien has always had an artistic flair and maintained a connection to art with the goal of expressing his emotions. This led him to experiment with his first artistic endeavors, drawing patterns with nails on wooden boards, crafting paper-mâché and resin figurines, working on mosaic designs on various trays, vases, and mirrors, making jewelry for his family, creating pixel art, and even delving into musical composition.
His childhood family trips to the French Riviera introduced him to the work of notable artists from the Nice School, such as Klein, as well as others like Dali, de Saint-Phalle, Warhol, Lichtenstein, and Kandinsky. Thus, from a young age, he was introduced to contemporary art and its ability to convey the artist’s vision. The artist’s native Normandy, the birthplace of Impressionism and Pointillism, with Grand Masters like Monet and Manet, also deeply influences him.
Attracted to the physical dimension of objects and fascinated by mathematics and physics, he eventually found his path by combining his two passions—science and art—through sculpture.
My dream was to launch rockets into space. Today, I channel my creativity and my passion for science as my own and unique way to fuel my urge to blend scientific exploration with artistic creation.
By blending creativity and science, Adrien Di Fazio aims to demonstrate that science can also be used to create art. While people often tend to complicate or even mystify science, the artist seeks to democratize science through his art and show that it can be fun, accessible, and artistic.
Adrien Di Fazio opposes the cartesian aspect of Science with the subjectivity of Art. He plays with them to give his own interpretation of their combination.

