I get always a bit confused when is about making a good CV. How you think a perfect CV should be made, do you have any online resources and example to submit?
Its quite Ok, clear and serious. You could add some info about studies, university or whatever it was. Just yesterday I saw this cv in flickr that I really liked: http://www.flickr.com/photos/bulooji/4171206772/
Personally I think its an amazing CV, very well done. I would suggest perhaps revising your English and your grammar with in your personal info section. I would be more than happy to help out with this if you would like?
I am currently re-working my own CV and intend to post it for your comments and feedback.
Pane - Some criticism that I hope you find valid. (I hope I don't tear this apart too much for you).
I would avoid making the first page an index (you have a TOC/index on the professional experience section after all). Opening with an index on a CV is dull and says nothing about you or your sense of good design (what I should be hiring you for).
The first page should be your profile and should communicate exactly who you are and what you want in the initial paragraph. You need to stop referring to yourself in the third person, this leaves a slightly odd impression. It is perfectly ok to say "I am a graphic artist and designer who is passionate about illustration, layout and typography..." not "Pane is..". Your name after all, is on the top of every page.
Is the fact that you're Italian a huge selling point? I personally would have thought that you were Italian by looking at your name - is your nationality of any issue? I could also tell that by looking at where you studied/worked (more on that later). How are you involved in the 'art scene'? What draws you to it? Do I need to know that you like surfing? My point being - that you don't tell me very much and what is worse than that, is that some/most of what you have told me in this profile could be seen as irrelevant in a work context...(though that depends on the work you're applying for). I don't mean to sound harsh here, but this is something you write for your future boss. It's my choice that wherever I apply I try to sound like I mean business - a strong attitude tends to shine through and grab the reader.
I have experience in sorting through many creative CV's -This wouldn't even get past an initial sift (apart from the fact that I like your illustrations). Then again, it does depend very much on what/where you are applying.
You need to include your education. If you don't have any don't worry - but I need to know, 'self-taught' is fine, nobody cares as long as you clearly love what you do (from your work it definitely looks that way). In many professional areas, people need to know this. It's not something you can just leave out.
One final criticism is that the page numbering on your 'professional work' section just doesn't work for me. Purely for the fact that I have to flip past another page and back again to see which image page matches which title. It would be far easier to have this as a rolling section, using headers next to the relevant images. Remember people are probably going to have this copied and stapled when they read it. It's always important to remember how they will see/read it.
You have some great work and I'm sure you'll do well in whatever field you're choosing. I hope some of what I've noted above is useful, but I wish you the best of luck.