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France
Painting, Ink on Paper
Size: 11.8 W x 15.7 H x 0.4 D in
Time goes back. "Le sel parfume l'orage. Les vagues se détachent et se perdent sous les voiles. Les marins voguent la galère. Va le vent et les vagues. Va le vent. Il souffle et se perd dans le sel des marins." "Salt scented storm. The waves break off and become lost under the veils. Sailors sail the galley. Go wind and waves. Go wind. It blows and gets lost in the sailors' salt."
Painting:Ink on Paper
Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork
Size:11.8 W x 15.7 H x 0.4 D in
Frame:Not Framed
Ready to Hang:No
Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
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France
South-west France native and having lived a long period in Paris, the Franco-Brazilian artist started painting in her very early age. She took pastel and oil painting lessons at The Roger Quillot Museum of Clermont-Ferrand, where she discovered the work of Bernard Buffet. Then she took portraiture lessons, where she learned how to represent human expression and watercolor with master Beyries from Bordeaux. She started studying Art History at La Sorbonne in Paris, where she discovered the symbolist painter Gustave Moreau and the different interpretations of Venus’s birth. But it was at the end of her adolescence that she started favoring blue color and its many shades. Having been a competition swimmer for ten years, her relation with water is very particular. Carrier element thanks to Archimedes's push, you however need to fight it in order to move forward. This very strong duality is representative of the human soul because we are all full of contradictions. Besides, isn't that where all the delicacy and beauty of human beings reside? The search for answers here goes through expressive portraits, absolutely unrealistic and intriguing aquatic compositions. All of this is tinged with the melancholy of passing time, as well as our helplessness in the face of it and the events of life. Her relation with the ocean is also spiritual and no doubt influenced by her Brazilian culture, where the most important afro-brazilian goddess is Yemanja, Ocean’s queen, mother of all Orishas, fishermen and women’s protector. Thus explains the presence of mysticism, strength and resilience in her work, as an inspiration to overcome obstacles. A message of hope thrown into the sea for us to have faith in our path.
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