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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
39.4x31.5in
About this artwork
Two Figures Discussing Geometry
Two abstracted figures side by side. Warm peachy tones and cool blue-greens, with orange, yellow, and muted earth colors filling out the composition. The faces are constructed from geometric shapes—flattened and reassembled in a way that suggests multiple viewpoints at once, a visual language invented only a hundred years ago.
The figures lean in close like they’re sharing something juicy. Maybe they’re debating… whether a face needs one nose or three.
It’s probably the kind of conversation many have had since these kind of forms were invented a century back—half the people who see them love the idea, half don’t like it at all. The two figures here seem to be having that exact argument, or maybe just gossiping about it, their angular faces pressed together in disagreement or delight.
Henrik Diamant, a Swedish painter working as a painter in Malaga. With a lifelong immersion in art collecting families and mentorship under Enrique Brinkman, works mainly with acrylic, gesso, egg tempera, and mixed media to add textural depth. His style evokes the surrealist playfulness of Joan Miró, merging abstract forms and dreamlike imagery with layered earth tones reminiscent of 15th- and 17th-century palettes. Diamant’s expressive canvases radiate joy, imagination, and a sense of discovery, inviting viewers to find shared feelings from colors and compositions where geometric structure meets spontaneous form, Mediterranean light meets bold color, mid-century palette meets the modern.