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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
59.1x47.2in
About this artwork
Radiating is not dominating; this creates a tension between two forms of power.
High up, the clergyman, perched on his pedestal, embodies vertical authority, that which is imposed by position.
His gaze descends towards the saint, situated below, bathed in an inner light.
But here, the visual hierarchy is disrupted: the one at the bottom is nevertheless the one who shines.
Domination seeks outward elevation; goodness, on the other hand, emanates… from within. One relies on power, the other on presence.
The man seems to be observing, perhaps questioning, this gentle force that constrains nothing. For true light does not impose itself: it illuminates.
And in this silent confrontation, the canvas suggests that greatness is not measured by height, but by the ability to radiate goodness.
My father's stories about meeting Salvador Dalí taught me early on that art is demanding and requires commitment. As a child, I drew, painted, and wrote: creating became my language. In the 90s, adolescence immersed me in Hip-Hop culture and graffiti, which taught me precision, speed of execution, and the importance of using my body in my artistic practice. In 2001, in Barcelona, my logo, Koeurélé, a winged heart symbolizing freedom, strength, and sensitivity, was born. Trained in industrial design at Strate, I developed rigor, methodology, and mastery of materials, and then collaborated with international brands. In my quest for a personal language, I created Filing: my own painting technique, developed over seven years of work. The paint flows from a distance from its support, poised between control and gravity; with each composition, I embark on a calligraphic dance with my medium. Each work becomes the trace of a definitive gesture, a living tension and total commitment.