Do You Feel a Breeze?
5.9”x15.1” print of “Do You Feel a Breeze?” by Lauryn Lellos
In the mesmerizing print of emotional surrealism, "Do You Feel a Breeze?", the artist skillfully combines mixed media elements to evoke a powerful sense of pain and longing. The painting showcases a woman with an enigmatic presence, her head transformed into a cloud that seems to be drifting away, off the panel. Within her cloud head, a turmoil of emotions seems to collide, engulfing her in a perpetually shifting mist. The woman's facial expression betrays her inner torment, her eyes reflecting a deep-rooted anguish that flickers between tumultuous sorrow and a distant longing for solace. It is as if her cloud head reveals the storm of thoughts and emotions that she cannot voice. Adorning her chest and tucked into her bikini bottoms are five yellow, drooping flowers, adding a profound symbolic layer to the artwork. These flowers, delicately displayed, serve as a juxtaposition between fragility and resilience, representing the woman's vulnerability yet also her strength to endure.
Through this captivating mixed media painting, viewers are invited to contemplate the complexities of the human experience. "Do You Feel a Breeze?" speaks to the deep-seated desires and untold sorrows that reside within us all, urging us to explore our own emotional landscapes and empathize with the unspoken stories of others.
5.9”x15.1” print of “Do You Feel a Breeze?” by Lauryn Lellos
In the mesmerizing print of emotional surrealism, "Do You Feel a Breeze?", the artist skillfully combines mixed media elements to evoke a powerful sense of pain and longing. The painting showcases a woman with an enigmatic presence, her head transformed into a cloud that seems to be drifting away, off the panel. Within her cloud head, a turmoil of emotions seems to collide, engulfing her in a perpetually shifting mist. The woman's facial expression betrays her inner torment, her eyes reflecting a deep-rooted anguish that flickers between tumultuous sorrow and a distant longing for solace. It is as if her cloud head reveals the storm of thoughts and emotions that she cannot voice. Adorning her chest and tucked into her bikini bottoms are five yellow, drooping flowers, adding a profound symbolic layer to the artwork. These flowers, delicately displayed, serve as a juxtaposition between fragility and resilience, representing the woman's vulnerability yet also her strength to endure.
Through this captivating mixed media painting, viewers are invited to contemplate the complexities of the human experience. "Do You Feel a Breeze?" speaks to the deep-seated desires and untold sorrows that reside within us all, urging us to explore our own emotional landscapes and empathize with the unspoken stories of others.
5.9”x15.1” print of “Do You Feel a Breeze?” by Lauryn Lellos
In the mesmerizing print of emotional surrealism, "Do You Feel a Breeze?", the artist skillfully combines mixed media elements to evoke a powerful sense of pain and longing. The painting showcases a woman with an enigmatic presence, her head transformed into a cloud that seems to be drifting away, off the panel. Within her cloud head, a turmoil of emotions seems to collide, engulfing her in a perpetually shifting mist. The woman's facial expression betrays her inner torment, her eyes reflecting a deep-rooted anguish that flickers between tumultuous sorrow and a distant longing for solace. It is as if her cloud head reveals the storm of thoughts and emotions that she cannot voice. Adorning her chest and tucked into her bikini bottoms are five yellow, drooping flowers, adding a profound symbolic layer to the artwork. These flowers, delicately displayed, serve as a juxtaposition between fragility and resilience, representing the woman's vulnerability yet also her strength to endure.
Through this captivating mixed media painting, viewers are invited to contemplate the complexities of the human experience. "Do You Feel a Breeze?" speaks to the deep-seated desires and untold sorrows that reside within us all, urging us to explore our own emotional landscapes and empathize with the unspoken stories of others.