3, 2, 1... Fire (planned)
My paintings could be considered as interpretations of chaos, in this chaos is a key moment, and then there is the millisecond after an explosion. Choose an explosion as a representation of chaos because I believe that is the beginning and end of everything. The Big Bang that supposedly created the universe that makes us think we know a great Genesis, fiery and destructive blast, blast, fragmentation, fragmentation, chaos, life and Revelation. It's a very strange recipe, but she tried to create my artwork. Try to explain easily, let's take the example of a watermelon in which we introduce several bomblets that explode at once. The first would be a curious still life images. We pressed the detonator and everything explodes. Three seconds later would only smoke, which does not interest us, and chunks of watermelon with no apparent connection rolling on the floor. But between these two moments is a millisecond of expansion of matter, form and color, and before all the atoms break their connections to pieces create an image, make a picture, That is the true moment of chaos, with a restrained emotional and a baroque in ways that make us see more of what you get. That is for me the time of Genesis and Revelation, the beginning and end of the chaos, from which it creates and destroys life. So this is a moment of extreme brevity that I should be portrayed, or rather interpreted as something that is part of us.
The chaos, fear and organic living in a strange moment in time to show allegorically the troubled times in which we live. A timed beauty and millimeter a second later, we know will disappear, a warning or carpe diem.
Martín Bartolomé