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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
47.2x39.4in
About this artwork
This painting explores the uneven nature of change. The blue forms move like coastlines or tidal lines, but the textured areas refuse to follow that direction. They interrupt, shift, and push against the flow — much like the moments in life when movement doesn’t feel smooth or linear.
The warm line cutting across the composition marks a boundary or turning point. It divides familiar water from what comes next — a decision, a departure, a new environment… that forces adaptation. The balance between harmony and disruption is intentional: change isn’t supposed to feel seamless.
I draw from my own experience of moving between places, languages, and identities. The surface holds the tension between belonging and displacement — fluidity versus resistance — the real structure of transition.
The work invites a slow read: noticing where movement continues, where it gets interrupted, and what emerges from that push.
I’m a self-taught painter working at the intersection of creativity and reality — which, in my case, means balancing a corporate career with a lifelong need to make art. Painting has always been the constant through moves, deadlines, and life decisions. While I still work in the corporate world, I’m carving out more space for my creative practice — and hoping, one day, the balance might shift.
I’ve lived in Italy, Spain, Argentina, Canada, and the Netherlands, and my work reflects that mix of places, feelings, and light. Portugal, especially, left its mark — its tiles, sea tones, and everyday beauty still show up on my canvas.
I work mostly in acrylics, blending figurative realism with surreal and symbolic elements. Sardines, shrimp, golden forks, and tile patterns often appear — ordinary things made slightly strange.
My paintings explore identity, nostalgia, and emotion — but always with color, playfulness, and a sense of vivid, unapologetic aliveness.