Discover my unique art paintings, available for sale. Each work is an expression of my passion and artistic vision, ready to find its place in your collection.
"Self-Portrait: Autopsy II" stages a radical introspection where the subject symbolically dissects itself to understand its own inner structure. The work explores the deconstruction of identity, between cold self-analysis and revelation of the psychic wounds hidden beneath the surface.
"Children of Evil" stages a figure of innocence traversed by corruption, violence, or the legacy of a deformed world. The work explores the loss of original purity, where childhood becomes an ambiguous territory between vulnerability and moral drift.
"Of Nonsense" explores a universe where logical and narrative bearings disintegrate, giving way to a fragmented and unstable reality. The work stages the absurd as pictorial language, revealing a tension between chaos, derision, and loss of meaning.
"Revolution My Tunisia" evokes a collective memory marked by rupture, the surge of uprising, and the quest for dignity. The work translates an energy of social transformation, between hope, chaos, and the reconstruction of a national identity in motion.
"Precipices" evokes a psychic plunge into the void, where forms seem drawn toward an inevitable fall. The work translates a tension between inner vertigo and loss of bearings, transforming space into an experience of disequilibrium and menace.
"Homage to Rembrandt" enters into dialogue with the chiaroscuro tradition, where light sculpts faces and reveals the psychological depth of figures. The work revisits this dramatic intensity to explore the density of the human gaze, between interiority, mystery, and gravity.
"Self-Portrait: Evanescence" evokes an identity in gradual disappearance, where the subject's features seem to dissolve into the pictorial matter. The work explores the fragility of human presence, oscillating between appearance and erasure, like a memory evaporating.
"Portraits, Bodies and Crosses" sets human identity in tension between individual representation, vulnerable flesh, and the symbol of suffering. The work explores the confrontation of body and sacred, where the portrait becomes a passage between incarnation, pain, and transcendence.
"Postmortem" explores the state of body and soul after the rupture of life, like a cold observation of what remains once life has withdrawn. The work questions the boundary between disappearance and memory, where human matter becomes trace, silence, and symbolic residue.