Is a painting meaningful?
I am interested in exploring new forms of visibility through painting by focusing on its fundamental elements—colour, line, mark, and perspective. With no intention of conveying a message or depicting a specific thing or place I aim to create paintings that evoke imagination, reflection, and feeling.
Following intuition and improvisation often leads me to outcomes I never planned. Each work becomes a sum of free will, choices, and playful engagement with the medium—an unfolding process that mirrors life itself, full of surprises and uncertainties.
Nothing is inherently meaningful; we are the ones who create meaning and assign value to things. A dog, for instance, is simply a dog—we are the ones who call it loyal, special, or our best friend. Likewise, a portrait is an image made with paint, and we give it meaning. An abstract or imaginary landscape is also an image made with paint, and its meaning emerges through our perception.
To me, painting is to feel and imagine, not to analyse or reason it out. It is both an act of seeing and of being—where meaning arises not from depiction, but from experience itself.