#47: At a Crossroads

#47: At a Crossroads

Having finished my variation of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam, I find myself at a crossroads. Should I continue experimenting with pop-art style reinterpretations, or return to portraiture, this time layered with colour and the moiré effect? In this post, I reflect on the weight — and potential — of choosing a direction.

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#46: Back to the Brush

#46: Back to the Brush

After weeks of moiré experiments and technical tests, I’ve finally returned to painting — beginning my reinterpretation of Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam. In this post, I reflect on the shift from preparation to brushwork, and the unique fulfilment painting brings.

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#45: Reimagining Creation Through Moiré

#45: Reimagining Creation Through Moiré

I’m beginning a new portrait inspired by Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam — but with a twist. Using the moiré illusion, I’m painting just the two hands so that only one is ever visible at a time. The result: God and man can never appear together, a reflection of disconnection in our age.

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#44: The Mathematics Behind the Moiré

#44: The Mathematics Behind the Moiré

Moiré patterns look almost magical — waves and distortions that shift as you move — but beneath that strangeness lies complex mathematics. In this post, I reflect on the hidden geometry behind moiré and why, as an artist, I prefer to feel it in the studio rather than calculate it on paper.

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#43: When the Studio Feels Like a Laboratory

#43: When the Studio Feels Like a Laboratory

Lately my studio looks less like a studio and more like a laboratory — Perspex sheets, varnish tests, and failed scraps scattered everywhere. In this post, I reflect on the role of experimentation in my moiré portrait project, and why research and failure are as essential as paint.

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