Valeria Del Vacchio is a digital artist working in the field of computer animation, exploring the convergence of motion graphics, typographic systems, and visual storytelling within contemporary digital culture.
Her practice is rooted in the study of time, coded language, and the transformation of data gathered from the analogue world. Fragments of reality – gestures, rhythms, environmental impressions – are translated into sequences of light, form, and sign, creating animated compositions where order and impermanence co-exist.
Central to her approach is the idea of data as a living material. Through processes of collection and transformation, Del Vacchio shapes information into visual fields that pulse, dissolve, and reconfigure. Light becomes both medium and subject, revealing hidden rhythms and producing patterns that speak of temporality, perception, and coded systems. Her works unfold as constellations of movement, suggesting a visual language that is at once structural and fluid.
Her work has been presented internationally in both physical and online contexts. Recent highlights include Aurorae at Art’otel, Hoxton, London (2025); Intertwined Passions at Artsect Gallery, London (2023). She has also exhibited with the NFT Biennial at Mowna (2023), and within the NFT Biennial in Istanbul (2023). Earlier exhibitions include Gallery 101, Vytautas Magnus University, Kaunas (2019); the Rome Media Art Festival (2015) and After Velvet, Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne (2014).
Del Vacchio studied New Media Art at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan and completed a six-month Erasmus exchange at Offenbach University in Germany. She has lived in Naples, Milan, Paris, and London. Her academic training provided a foundation in design and multimedia practices, while encouraging experimental approaches that now define her work. She continues to develop her research through computer animation, guided by a visual language that privileges light, rhythm, and the ephemeral sensibility of structures in motion.