“Saudade (A Portuguese and Galician word that has no direct translation into English) was once described as “the love that remains” after someone is gone. Saudade is the recollection of feelings, experiences, places or events that once brought excitement, pleasure, well-being, which now triggers the senses and makes one live again. It can be described as an emptiness, like someone (e.g., one’s children, parents, sibling, grandparents, friends, pets) or something (e.g., places or things one used to do during childhood; other activities performed in the past) that should be there in a particular moment is missing, and the individual feels this absence.
It brings sad and happy feelings all together, sadness for missing and happiness for having experienced the feeling.” A paragraph extracted from Wikipedia.
The paintings in this series have no firm direction, all that occurs on the canvas is spontaneous. I use a mixed medium in most of the artworks in order to be able to pass onto the viewer that sense of vagueness I feel during the “saudades’” stage.
Most of what happens on the canvas is triggered by the state of current social life as it becomes more and more limited to “virtuality” – it seems that technology is taking over – more is happening through the internet than live. It is scary, isn’t it?
The girl and the carousel | Mixed medium on Canvas
Saudades Gallery
Other Art Series
Dreams and Shadows
In this particular series entitled, Dreams and Shadows I talk about my personal life, how dramatic sometimes it turned – moments of evasive fear, nostalgia, uncertainty, yet with a deemed light surfacing from the depth of the tunnel
Under the Moonlight
Our nights were odd, as the electricity (one provided by a local public generator) went off after 8pm or 9pm, our light for the rest of the night was provided by the moon, the days that it came to into play. Some days it was intense and other days it was weak and sometimes off season…
Fragments
I enjoy abstraction, which features quite prominently in my work; is this perhaps my mask? I don’t know…the abstraction seems just to happen!