Diana Ficca builds a painting that breathes silence. In her works, the landscape becomes a state of the soul: horizons opening toward the sea, skies shifting tone with the light, figures standing still before immensity. Her language—minimal and musical—inhabits that threshold between the visible and the remembered, where stillness turns into emotion.

Trained in music, art history, and painting, Ficca develops an intimate poetics in which atmosphere and color are the true protagonists. Her gaze translates the everyday into essential image: a canoe, an open door, a sunset, a barely suggested gesture. Through a precise palette of blues, ochres and pinks she turns light into matter, and painting into a suspended moment in time.

  

Her trajectory includes exhibitions in museums, galleries, and cultural centers across Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Spain, and Italy. She has presented her work in spaces such as the Sor Josefa Díaz y Clucellas Museum in Santa Fe, the Galería de la Tartaruga in Rome, Sisley, and arteBA, among others. Her pieces belong to public collections such as the National Atomic Energy Commission, the César Fernández Navarro Museum, and the Alfredo Fortabat Center, as well as to major private collections in Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, the United States, and Australia.

In each of her paintings, Ficca reveals a way of seeing in which emotion becomes landscape and silence fills with meaning. Her work invites us to pause, to contemplate, to remember what still resonates beyond color.