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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
27.6x19.7in
About this artwork
The Poor Girl belongs to a period when I painted very instinctively, mixing charcoal and acrylic. This portrait was born from a raw, almost urgent gesture, where the material and colors overlap without seeking to control everything.
What particularly struck me was her gaze: direct, profound, almost silent, as if she carried within her a story I could only glimpse. The charcoal marks, the imperfections in the paint, and the unfinished layers give… the image a vibrant, almost fragile energy.
I sought to capture this presence, this quiet strength, letting the spontaneity of the gesture guide the composition. It is a portrait where emotion takes precedence over precision — an encounter between expression and humanity.
A Czech-born painter living in France, she develops a figurative practice centered on the body as a site of inner transformation. Nourished by training in visual arts and fashion design, her painting—influenced by expressionism—blends anatomical rigor with instinctive gestures.
Through figures often isolated, immersed, or confronted by a boundary (water, glass, surface), her work explores the processes of individuation and integration of the Shadow, in the sense of Carl Gustav Jung. The body becomes the visible stage for psychic and perceptual tensions, revealing
Through figures often isolated, immersed, or confronted by a boundary (water, glass, surface), her work explores the processes of individuation, the integration of the Shadow, and the states of vulnerability linked to becoming oneself. Flesh becomes the visible terrain of an intimate passage, where psychic tensions, sensory perception, and presence crystallize in the pictorial matter.