Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Pencil on Canvas
- Other details : Artwork on wood. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 15.7x19.7in
About this artwork
I never sent this piece.
It was meant as a gift for someone who taught me a lot — someone I trusted, until I didn’t. Around that time, I relapsed and was hospitalized, and silence replaced everything we once had. When I came back, the drawing wasn’t perfect, the moment had passed, and I realized: not everyone deserves access to your art, or your story.
Bar Lina was also born from anger — from being told it was “courageous” to revisit classical… works as a beginner. I didn’t take it as a compliment. I took it as a limit — and chose to ignore it. Inspired by Mona Lisa, this piece became a quiet refusal.
Some things are not sent. They stay — and they define you instead.
It was meant as a gift for someone who taught me a lot — someone I trusted, until I didn’t. Around that time, I relapsed and was hospitalized, and silence replaced everything we once had. When I came back, the drawing wasn’t perfect, the moment had passed, and I realized: not everyone deserves access to your art, or your story.
Bar Lina was also born from anger — from being told it was “courageous” to revisit classical… works as a beginner. I didn’t take it as a compliment. I took it as a limit — and chose to ignore it. Inspired by Mona Lisa, this piece became a quiet refusal.
Some things are not sent. They stay — and they define you instead.
Adele The Princess
France
“In my world, only my rules apply. I am my vision, and what suits me best.”
The work of Adele the Princess is not defined by traditional mastery. She believes that recreating so-called “masterpieces” is something anyone can do. She is not concerned with perfect execution—what matters is the evocation, the feeling behind each piece. For her, it’s about proving that everyone can try, experiment, and create something meaningful.
She creates when she feels the need; her process is rooted in spontaneity. She revisits masterpieces by focusing exclusively on Black figures, reshaping a narrative that has often excluded people like her from classical art. She uses gold for its elegance and the way it enhances the richness of Black skin tones.
Everything is guided by personal preference rather than academic rules. She doesn’t worry about whether her work resonates with everyone. It is her world, her rules, her vision.
Welcome to Adele The ¨¨Princess ’s Louvre.
The work of Adele the Princess is not defined by traditional mastery. She believes that recreating so-called “masterpieces” is something anyone can do. She is not concerned with perfect execution—what matters is the evocation, the feeling behind each piece. For her, it’s about proving that everyone can try, experiment, and create something meaningful.
She creates when she feels the need; her process is rooted in spontaneity. She revisits masterpieces by focusing exclusively on Black figures, reshaping a narrative that has often excluded people like her from classical art. She uses gold for its elegance and the way it enhances the richness of Black skin tones.
Everything is guided by personal preference rather than academic rules. She doesn’t worry about whether her work resonates with everyone. It is her world, her rules, her vision.
Welcome to Adele The ¨¨Princess ’s Louvre.