Abstraction – Portrait of Emotions
Abstraction – Portrait of Emotions
Abstrakcja
Portrety
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Lead time
Lead time
The completion time depends on several factors, such as the type of technique, paint drying time, image size , the need for manual finishing and securing the image.
Turnaround time for Oil Giclée (hand-finished)
✅ Giclée print on canvas
✅ Pigment print drying
✅Texturing, hand painting and finishing
✅ Drying – (depending on layer thickness and type of medium, image size)
✅ Stretching the canvas on the stretcher frame
✅ Quality control and packaging
⏳ Total turnaround time: 3 -7 days
Delivery time for Available Immediately, Ready-made images
✅ This means that the painting is painted and ready to be shipped the next business day.
1. Title: "Abstraction – Portrait of Emotions"
2. Description of the image:
This isn't a portrait you recognize. It's a portrait you feel . "Abstraction – Portrait of Emotions" deconstructs the human face, breaking it down into planes of color, light, and form. It's not about physical resemblance—it's about the invisible. It's about what shivers beneath the surface of the skin—fear, longing, excitement, inner tension.
The painting pulses with color. Deep reds, blues, purples, and yellows intertwine, creating a multi-layered narrative. Fragments of features—an eye, a mouth, the shadow of a cheek—emerge like memories, not concrete objects. It's an impression of personality, born from an emotional impulse.
3. Technique:
Oil on canvas – a combination of glazes and broad, soft brushstrokes with details executed with a thin, dry brush ( Dry Brush + Fine Brushwork ). The painting has depth, as if constructed from many overlapping layers of the soul.
4. Style:
Abstract Expressionist portraiture – a balance between deconstruction and structure. A clash of color energy with emotional precision.
5. Colors:
Vibrant and bold, intense reds, navy blues, purples, and luminous yellows dominate. Colors are not a backdrop, but a language—they convey emotions more powerfully than facial features.
6. Invoice:
Complex, multi-layered – glazes add depth, impasto accents stand out for their texture. Dry brushwork adds moments of roughness – like erasures in memory.
7. Inspiration:
The painting draws on the spirit of Kandinsky, the intuitive expression of Egon Schiele, and the emotional power of Franz Kline. It is also a modern answer to the question: what is a portrait today?
8. Message and multidimensionality of interpretation:
It's an emotion encapsulated in form. The image can be interpreted as introspection, a disintegration of personality, a transformation, or a catharsis. It's open, non-literal, allowing the viewer to find their own emotional reflection within it.
9. Originality and authenticity:
This portrait is a one-of-a-kind experiment—a unique set of emotions captured on canvas. It doesn't reconstruct the face, but transforms it—in a sincere, disturbing, and authentic way. Signed, painted with complete awareness and freedom.
✨ Look longer. This isn't a portrait. It's an echo of a person. ✨
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