Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Digital on Paper
- Framing : Framing on request
- Dimensions : 24x32in
- Edition : All editions sold (50 / 50)
- Artist's proof : 5
About this artwork
Immerse yourself in "Deserted Echoes," a captivating digital masterpiece that blends abstract and impressionist styles to capture the haunting beauty of decay and abandonment. This artwork portrays a deteriorated room filled with sand in the heart of the Namib Desert, featuring a sequence of doorways that recede into shadow. Each textured layer and subtle shadow whispers a story of neglect, evoking a profound sense of nostalgia and melancholic beauty.…
The interplay of light and darkness emphasizes the passage of time and the ghostly presence of past inhabitants, inviting viewers to contemplate the ephemeral nature of existence.
It brings a contemplative energy into any space, provoking introspection and admiration for the timeless beauty found in desolation. This piece doesn't just adorn a room—it elevates it, resonating with the soul's longing for connection to the past. Owning "Desert
It brings a contemplative energy into any space, provoking introspection and admiration for the timeless beauty found in desolation. This piece doesn't just adorn a room—it elevates it, resonating with the soul's longing for connection to the past. Owning "Desert
Carlos Reck
Germany
Credentials
- Local Artist
- Favorited by galleries
- Featured in gallery curations
- Works on commission
I work with photography as a way of observing what usually goes unnoticed—quiet gestures of light, form, and presence. Through black and white, I focus on subjects that feel solitary but not empty: a leaf suspended in darkness, shadows stretching through snow, a fish adrift in vast water. These images are meditations on stillness and emotional tension. Whether I capture nature or architecture, I look for visual balance and quiet dissonance—framing what is there, but often unseen. I am drawn to minimalism not as a style but as a means of clarity. My photographs aim to slow down perception, creating space for the viewer to linger. In that pause, I hope to evoke something felt: a softness, a distance, or a quiet recognition. My work moves between intimacy and abstraction, revealing the poetic in the overlooked. Each image becomes a fragment of time—a moment held long enough to feel its weight.