This series captures the haunting legacy of industrialization and its hidden toll: global warming. Iconic features such as ports, chimneys, and factories—once heralds of progress—now evoke fragility and disruption. Through a technique of inversion, negatives become positives, light turns into shadow, and colors explode into intense, surreal skies. These altered cityscapes of post-industrial New York, with fiery and unsettling atmospheres, serve as metaphors for an atmosphere disturbed and transformed by human hands. In these quiet yet powerful images, the climate's deep memory confronts us with an urgent question: how long can we ignore the consequences before it’s too late? Highlighting places like Vinnegar Hill and Lower Manhattan, the work presents a vision both familiar and profoundly changed.
This vibrant artwork captures Fred Astaire mid-dance, set against a dynamic graffiti-covered urban backdrop. The composition fuses classic elegance with street culture, highlighting movement through bold colors and energetic lines. The interplay between Astaire's poised figure and the colorful, spontaneous graffiti evokes a joyful dialogue between traditional dance and contemporary urban expression. Technique-wise, the piece blends figurative representation with street art aesthetics, celebrating the vitality of dance as a universal language within the city's pulse.
The most iconic portrait of the 20th century reinterpreted, as Marcel Duchamp did in his time with the most iconic portrait of all time, the Mona Lisa. It was time to update it with a work of our own era.
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