Visual Artist
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Faces from the Subconscious

Selected Work from the Series

Large Format Print on Archival Paper


ARTIST NOTE

In the depths of the human mind lies a vast and mysterious realm, where imagination intertwines with reality, and dreams manifest as fragments of conscious experience. It is here that I find inspiration for my ongoing series, Faces from the Subconscious. It’s genesis can be traced back to my longstanding fascination with surrealist’s ability to tap into the subconscious and it was during the the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting lockdown, where we had no choice but to look inward, that I began developing this series. Combining elements of surrealism with digital aesthetics, my work delves into the intricate relationship between the conscious and the subconscious, interweaving personal experiences to broader societal and technological shifts.

At its core lies the technique of automatic drawings — a spontaneous and instinctive practice deeply rooted in surrealist ideals that seeks to bypass rationality and access the inner recesses of the human psyche. For me this process involves channeling my conscious thoughts towards various forms of media — podcasts, phone calls, or other auditory stimuli while engaging in unconscious drawings. This intentional diversion transforms the act of drawing into a sequence of movements guided by muscle memory and subconscious associations that emerge organically between experience and information.

“Faces act as the window into my subconscious”, Automatic Drawings on Paper

Within this creative process, a dominant motif emerges in form of faces, serving as a template through which I am able to tap into my inner subconscious realm. Far from mere randomness, this recurring feature reflects the repetition and habitual patterns that have been ingrained in me over years of drawing faces. As I remove conscious thought from the equation and enter a state of flow, my body reverts to these familiar patterns and gestures where the subconscious takes fragments of conscious input and weaves them into intricate and sometimes unexpected associations. As a result, hundreds of unknown faces materialize, each one representing a doorway to unexplored narratives.

Water Splits into Three

Print on Archival Paper

Barcelona, 2020