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This artwork was inspired by three people: my mother and my two sisters. In this piece, I wanted to capture the vibrant energy of an everyday moment, transforming it into an explosion of color and bold forms. I used strong lines and intense colors to convey joy and movement, inviting the viewer to see what is familiar and the importance of caring for these flowers.
Néstor Neyret's work focuses on the human figure as an emotional territory. Through a contemporary figuration rooted in Cubism, the artist fragments faces and bodies to explore identity, vulnerability, and the inner tension of the modern individual. Her characters don't narrate actions; they inhabit states of being. Waiting, sadness, memory, and resistance appear as silent presences. The face becomes a psychological map, and the body a symbolic structure where the intimate and the social coexist. Fragmentation does not respond to a formal search but to an existential condition: the contemporary subject appears traversed by invisible forces —emotional, social and temporal— that configure him. The intense color and sharp outlines don't function as ornamentation, but as boundaries and pressure. Each chromatic plane defines an emotion. Each line contains a tension. His work constructs human archetypes rather than individual portraits.