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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
60x36in
About this artwork
The painting is part of the series Fleurs du Mal, a retake on Baudelaire's essay but here dealing with environmental issues.
The ability to rethink the role of abstraction in our communication system is extremely important for the survival of the relationship between art and language as a creative feature of humanity. In my work, I see a strong relationship between pictorial image and language, color and form, surface and support, allowing various… ways of redefining connection and possibilities between language and visual form. While anachronistic and congruous forms and lines are strained in balance and friction, they can create juxtapositions between proximity and disparity in which distinct patterns emerge in a collision course.
Denise Carvalho is a painter with a rich background shaped by Neo-concrete art in Brazil, academic training in New York, and international exhibition experience. Her multifaceted practice spans representational and abstract works, with techniques deeply intuitive, evolving from abstraction to poignant figurative painting influenced by her family and early modernist art. She channels layers of art history, music, philosophy, and personal memory into styles that remain distinctly her own. Her artworks resonate with profound spirituality, empathetic reflection, and a search for transformation—inviting viewers to explore both inner growth and the enduring bonds of creativity across generations.
Denise recently published a book, We are All Children at the End, which is a deeply personal account of the artist's upbringing in Brazil, her journey to the US, and her life in New York City, while also exploring her mother’s struggle with Alzheimer’s during the final years of her life. When her mother moved in with her in the US, the author began teaching her how to draw and paint. This creative process became a way for her mother to overcome many challenges posed by the illness and rediscover her passion for the arts. The author documented some of her mother’s works, including paintings and drawings, during this time. The book highlights how art can change the perception of illness and inspire a renewed desire for life. The artist writes under the pen name Denise VanMoss. This book can be purchased through the publisher, Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Ltd.