Details:
Size: 100 × 70 cm
Oil on Linnen
stretched on a wooden frame
Signed front and back
Certificate of Authenticity
About the Artwork:
Echoes of Rebellion began as a feeling I couldn’t shake — that tight, inner restlessness when something in you refuses to stay quiet. While painting, I worked fast, letting instinct take over. Lines were broken, gestures interrupted, colors collided: crimson against electric blue, yellow cutting through the noise. None of it was planned, and that was the point — rebellion doesn’t follow a sketch.
For me, this painting is about pushing back against whatever tries to contain us — expectations, rules, even our own habits. When you stand in front of it, I want you to feel that same pulse: the friction, the energy, the possibility that comes from not obeying the “should.”
Every mark is preserved in oil on linen, layered with hand-mixed pigments. Echoes of Rebellion is not about destruction — it’s about claiming space, disrupting the quiet, and remembering that freedom often begins in the moment we say “no.”
Details:
Size: 100 × 70 cm
Oil on Linnen
stretched on a wooden frame
Signed front and back
Certificate of Authenticity
About the Artwork:
Echoes of Rebellion began as a feeling I couldn’t shake — that tight, inner restlessness when something in you refuses to stay quiet. While painting, I worked fast, letting instinct take over. Lines were broken, gestures interrupted, colors collided: crimson against electric blue, yellow cutting through the noise. None of it was planned, and that was the point — rebellion doesn’t follow a sketch.
For me, this painting is about pushing back against whatever tries to contain us — expectations, rules, even our own habits. When you stand in front of it, I want you to feel that same pulse: the friction, the energy, the possibility that comes from not obeying the “should.”
Every mark is preserved in oil on linen, layered with hand-mixed pigments. Echoes of Rebellion is not about destruction — it’s about claiming space, disrupting the quiet, and remembering that freedom often begins in the moment we say “no.”