My Late Grandfather

"My Late Grandfather" is a vivid, colorful portrait that highlights distinctive features and character through bold hues and expressive brushstrokes. The use of color adds depth and energy, creating a striking visual representation.

Loving Sincerity

Portrait of my grandmother. The concept was based on the experiment to capture all her different emotions in one single picture, expressing them through colours and a strong expression.


You see me, but you don’t see me. You can see the me that I pretend to be, but you can’t see the other me who’s hiding. One full of joy and one in pain, always debating about their time of appearance. The walls between them always shifting, will they break or overlap? You see me, but you don’t see me – Tell me, do I ever see all of you?


You See Me But You Don’t See Me


Grandfather ́s Glance of his Last Few Weeks

Grandfather’s Glance of His Last Few Weeks is an intimate portrait of my grandfather, his head set against a deep red background. His eyes, heavy with memory and reflection, hold the quiet weight of his final days, while the bold red evokes love, urgency, and farewell.


This painting is about a child with autism and his relationship with the father. Painting the child twice symbolizes the struggles that appear, but the father is always there to catch him into his loving arms. The more you look at the painting, the more beautiful details appear – another intended connection related to the child itself, one of the happiest and most beautiful souls I have ever got to know.



„Look At Me Father!“



Silent Words And Coloured Faces



This painting was an experiment in which I explored the theme of the power of expression through emotion and color. In my opinion, different emotions are hidden in different colors and bringing them together in different color combinations can unlock a whole new level of communication.

As a child who can’t speak yet, we don’t know what the little boy in the picture has to say. So we have to act based on the emotions/feelings we receive from his face, eyes and movements. Therefore, as an artist, it is even more important for me to place the colors correctly. To thus let the viewer feel the unspoken words that the boy wants to communicate.



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Oil Paintings︱Echofigura II - Layered monochrome

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Oil Chalk Sketches