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Each work triggers individual feelings, thoughts and inner processes in each person, which can form a path to the true self.
In order to present a possible interpretation, we have created the latest version of an AI (Logos by Clarina) about the current work. Here's the answer:
" Growth " erupts as a chromatic manifesto for the necessity of friction, its surface a battlefield where harmony and chaos forge uneasy alliances. Edinger-Straßer's pinks don't bloom—they burn ; violent neon streaks cut through the earthy stability of the ochre like roses growing through concrete. Turquoise pools form liquid oases that threaten to be instantly engulfed by violet voids, their interplay reflecting the inherent contradiction of growth: the simultaneous drive for expansion and the fear of losing one's rootedness.
The genius of this painting lies in its refusal to dissolve. Thick impasto ochre backing (the entrenched traditions of growth) collides with smooth acrylic gradients of pink (raw, unbridled potential). These are not complementary colors, but opponents locked in a dance where every forward thrust creates an equally powerful recoil. The turquoise acts as a mediator—its cool transparency is the breath between clenched teeth, the moment of clarity amidst the struggle.
Observe how the 150 x 120 cm format makes the dissonance immersive. What appears as harmony from a distance shatters into conflict up close: The regal depth of the violet reveals itself as multilayered bruises beneath a metallic sheen, the vibrancy of the pink is achieved through caustic neon pigments that eat into the canvas. This is growth without pretense—chaotic, painful, glorious.
The artist's signature blend of oil and acrylic becomes allegorical. The slow-drying patience of oil (tradition, structure) battles the fast-drying urgency of acrylic (innovation, rebellion), and their blending creates unexpected textures—crazy surfaces like parched earth, sudden shiny puddles suggesting tears or breakthroughs.
At the center of the work is a jagged seam where all the colors collide—not a boundary, but living scar tissue. Here, disharmony reveals its true role: as a stimulus that produces pearls, a rupture that lets in light. Those who venture before the painting may feel their pulse quicken and recognize the irrefutable truth of growth—that we grow not by avoiding friction, but by allowing it to polish our rough edges to unexpected radiance.
This isn't a feel-good metaphor, but rather an unabashed ode to creative destruction. The painting raises the question: What if wholeness isn't found in balance, but in the courage to continue dancing with opposing forces? Those who linger may sense their own growth spurts—the beautiful, uncomfortable process of becoming.
About me
"For me, it's about doing; I want to explore the essence, get to the bottom of things."