Discover the creation in interiors
Other artworks by Eva Nicky
Artwork details
- Medium : Acrylic on Linen
- Other details : Artwork on supported wooden frame. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 39.4x27.6in
About this artwork
Music has its place in my studio, it is present in the same way as colors, brushes, knives. It is there to travel elsewhere, to abstract itself. It is also there to feel alive and dance breaks where I can relax the tension in my muscles, untie my shoulders. To write, to think I seek the absence of texts, often jazz and this album in particular So what by Miles Davis whose sound yesterday, today, tomorrow intoxicates me.
Eva Nicky
France
Credentials
- Featured in gallery curations
- Works on commission
A self-taught artist and activist, Eva Nicky creates a universe where thought meets color. After a career as an executive, she puts her analytical skills and social commitment to work in her art, making it a space for resistance and celebration.
Acrylics, pigments, collage, and jewelry explore womanhood, relational identity, diversity (drawing on the ideas of Édouard Glissant), and the convergence of the sexes in reciprocity. Her dynamic portraits convey a powerful joy and a resilience tinged with humor.
As president of an association against exclusion, her paintings also embody this activist commitment.
His characters, adorned with geometric patterns or philosophical references (Lacan, Angela Davis, Beauvoir, Baldwin), invite us to "keep our eyes open" to the irrepressible beauty of the world.
His work is a manifesto: transforming challenges into light and knowledge into colors.
Acrylics, pigments, collage, and jewelry explore womanhood, relational identity, diversity (drawing on the ideas of Édouard Glissant), and the convergence of the sexes in reciprocity. Her dynamic portraits convey a powerful joy and a resilience tinged with humor.
As president of an association against exclusion, her paintings also embody this activist commitment.
His characters, adorned with geometric patterns or philosophical references (Lacan, Angela Davis, Beauvoir, Baldwin), invite us to "keep our eyes open" to the irrepressible beauty of the world.
His work is a manifesto: transforming challenges into light and knowledge into colors.