VOTRE ART
THE OFFICIAL PAGE OF VOTRE ART
A monumental mural by Luis Gustavo Martins — well known as L7MATRIX transforms a blank wall into a living surge of motion, where a serene human profile emerges from an explosion of fluid blues and whites.
Known for his signature fusion of realism and abstraction, the Brazilian artist layers sweeping, almost liquid strokes that feel like energy in motion—part smoke, part water, part emotion. The figure appears both forming and dissolving at once, capturing a fleeting moment between chaos and clarity.
Through this dynamic interplay, L7MATRIX turns urban space into a canvas of feeling, inviting viewers to see not just an image, but a state of mind in constant transformation.
13/03/2026
Laetitia Ky is an Ivorian artist known for creating intricate sculptures using her own hair, shaped with wire and thread. Through this unique medium, she transforms hair into a powerful and imaginative form of artistic expression.
Inspired by pre-colonial African hairstyling traditions, her work has gained global recognition for its originality and strong cultural message. Which piece stands out to you the most? 🤔
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22/02/2026
Fragile Strength: The Poetic Watercolors of Agnès-Cécile
Agnès-Cécile’s watercolor portraits feel like emotions caught mid-breath. Faces emerge and dissolve into washes of color—florals blooming from skin, skies drifting across shoulders, and delicate features melting into soft stains of pigment. The figures don’t just exist in space; they seem to carry landscapes within them, where memory, vulnerability, and quiet resilience blur together. Her use of fluid drips and translucent layers allows the medium itself to speak, creating portraits that feel alive, tender, and fleeting.
What makes these works so powerful is the balance between fragility and strength. The faces appear gentle, even breakable, yet they hold a deep emotional presence—eyes that linger, expressions that feel private and honest. Agnès-Cécile turns watercolor into a language of feeling, where beauty is found not in perfection, but in the moments where color runs free, edges fade, and emotion quietly takes form on paper.
21/02/2026
She may look like she’s doing nothing — but in truth, she’s carrying the weight of the world.
In Zaragoza, Spain, the sculpture La Mujer Que Nunca Hizo Nada (“The Woman Who Never Did Anything”) by Spanish artist José Luis Fernández captures a woman burdened with household tools, machines, and daily chores on her back. It’s a powerful tribute to the invisible, unpaid labor carried by mothers and caregivers every single day.
What some call “nothing” is actually everything to a family and a society — meals prepared again and again, endless laundry, care given through long days and sleepless nights.
This artwork sparks a global conversation about how domestic work is valued, and about the emotional and physical weight so many women carry in silence.
Her burden isn’t only made of metal and objects — it’s love, responsibility, resilience, and sacrifice. A quiet reminder that what we see is rarely the whole story.
29/01/2026
Austrian photographer Stefan Draschan has created a quietly enchanting body of work by spending hours in Europe’s great museums, patiently waiting for the perfect, unplanned moment when a visitor unknowingly aligns with the artwork they’re viewing. Through matching colors, patterns, shapes, posture, or even mood, the person becomes part of the piece itself. The result is his beloved ongoing series, People Matching Artworks — a charming blend of humor, coincidence, and gentle poetry that reveals how we unconsciously reflect the art around us.
The series began in 2014 with a lucky discovery: a man’s denim jacket echoing a Georges Braque painting in Berlin. What started as a one-time surprise soon became a recurring phenomenon Draschan noticed in museums from Munich and Vienna to Paris and beyond. None of the scenes are staged. He simply studies visitor behavior, chooses the right viewpoint, and waits for the alignment to happen naturally.
Which image is your favorite? 😉
26/01/2026
Iranian artist Alireza Karimi Moghaddam reimagines how Vincent van Gogh might navigate today’s world. Through symbolic illustrations, he places Van Gogh in modern settings shaped by smartphones, trends, branding, and viral culture.
In these scenes, Van Gogh often feels out of place. While those around him chase status, distraction, and spectacle, he remains drawn to art, nature, and deeper meaning. The works gently challenge what we value in the digital age, and reflect on how a creator devoted to authenticity might feel in a world driven by attention.
Kathrin Marchenko crafts striking dimensional portraits and figurative artworks by stitching thick threads onto transparent tulle. This inventive approach makes her pieces appear like sketches floating in midair. Her works push beyond traditional embroidery, forming three-dimensional silhouettes full of depth, fluid transitions, and a vivid sense of motion.
“A Young Man Crowned with a Laurel Wreath” paper sculpture by .art
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05/08/2023
Watercolor painting by
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19/07/2023
Arteries of London - Digital Collage by
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18/07/2023
Hyper-realistic painting by
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17/07/2023
AI-generated Architecture: “Gaudism” by Ariadna Gimenez.
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