Manuela Pincitore was born in Rome in 1974 and, after the scientific studies, she chose a humanistic faculty that could refine her literary knowledge and
that allowed her, at the same time, to stimulate her "figurative" attitudes. So it is
graduated in Literature with the course of Cinematography, deepening everything that was related
to the Image: the composition of the frame, the critical reading of a "painting" in any of his
form, Photography, Cinema as a synthesis of all these elements.
In those same years, to get some money in her pocket, she painted on commission, experimenting
different techniques and supports: from pastel to charcoal, from acrylic to oil, adapting these
materials for canvas, paper, decorative objects (chairs, appliques ...), theatrical scenography, glass and
to entire domestic walls.
She attended the course of Drawing and Painting at the Rufa (Rome University of Fine Arts), and a
private course at the Studio of the roman Artist Paola Drago, known within the "100 artists" event in Rome.
She was selected for the GodArt market exhibition in 2012.
In 2018 he participated in the workshop with the artist Miltos Manetas, at the MAXXI museum in Rome, during his exhibition Internet Painting.
She was selected for the first edition of the Palermo International Art Prize, July 2018.
She cultivated his passion for self-taught photography and then attended Photoshop courses and workshops with photographers like Fabio Moscatelli,Angelo Raffaele Turetta and Maestro Franco Fontana, to develop the creative and social approach to photo projects. She was selected to exhibit in collective photography (Roma: Palazzo Merulana, Tevere Art Gallery. Treviso: Casa dei Carraresi) and market exhibitions and art awards.
Her art, photographic and pictorial, arises from the need to recount situations and emotions that are singular and plural at the same time,capable of grasping that need which, despite the individual's ability to feel, unites all human beings: sharing and compassion, in the meaning true to its original etymology.