The GEometry of Wonder series
The Geometry of Wonder I
This collection reaches a deeper form of visual and symbolic maturity. My artistic language, through this minimalist collection, becomes both more refined and more meaningful.
The lines are intentionally raw and textured, with an almost organic graininess reminiscent of paper, printing grain, or even a retro aesthetic akin to editorial illustration or risograph printing.
Another defining element of this collection's style is the integration of typography title into the images. Letters and words are superimposed on the portraits like fragments of language from a parallel culture.
In short, this style could be defined as a form of calm, meditative surrealism, where the cosmos is not above us, but within us. Where each landscape is an inner state. Where each figure is a question without an answer. Where visual simplicity becomes a vehicle for profound and universal emotions.
It is the art of the threshold, of the in-between, where each image seems to be a moment of transition; between what we are, and what we could become.
The Geometry of Wonder I Portfolio
The Geometry of Wonder II
This collection is the continuation of my artistic work developing an esoteric and introspective aesthetic, where each figure appears as a fragment of an archetype from an inner world.
This collection's artistic style is an esoteric, minimalist, and introspective surrealism, where figures become living symbols and each image acts as a visual ritual, a gateway to an inner world of gentleness, mystery, and light.
The surrealism here is calm, muted, almost ceremonial. Bodies float, sit, curl up, and meditate. They participate in a silent ritual; each posture is a coded gesture, a discreet invocation.
The characters are often alone, centered, isolated in a cosmic or monochrome space. This solitude is not sad: it is initiatory, turned inward. One has the impression of witnessing moments of intimate revelation, as if each being were receiving or transmitting a secret.
The forms are simple, almost childlike, but this simplicity acts as a ritualistic stripping away. Each element is a pure symbol, reduced to its essence: a star, an eye, a crown, a gesture. This minimalism reinforces the archetypal dimension of the figures.
The saturated colors create a paradoxical atmosphere: luminous yet introspective, joyful yet meditative, pop yet sacred. They evoke naive frescoes, divination cards, and reinvented icons.
The Geometry of Wonder II Portfolio