Fountain of desire - Lakis Mouratidis

€420,00
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Not only are world views fluid for Lakis Mouratidis, but also this red woman's body, which merges into a grape vine. Grapes stand for love, devotion, seduction, fertility, enjoyment, abundance, joie de vivre, openness and sociability. Both are fed by the tap from the clouds, which reaches its destination through a knotted trickle and wraps around the upper body. The figure is not free, because it is apparently rooted in the barren ground that forms a counter-pool.

The picture is from the Emephere Dialect series that was exhibited in Düsseldorf, Cologne and Berlin.

Image size 35 X 56 cm

High quality gallery print 10 signed copies

Delivery time 2-3 weeks

Unframed


Lakis Mouratidis, Volos, Greece

Lakis Mouratidis was born in 1950 in Drama (Northern Greece) and found painting only late. He has a degree in surveying and is known in his home country for your political work. He has often painted for the 40 ° Urban Art Festival in Düsseldorf and has since successfully exported the festival to Greece. His works often make use of surreal elements, which for him are the ideal form of expression. For his works he also often uses the very large canvases such as walls and house facades and thus strives for a direct 'dialogue' with people.


EPHEMERAL DIALECTS 

For me painting as a reason and as an action concerns 'the deep persistence of the colours' which determine exactly the boundaries of the endogenic expression of the conscious and unconscious, the illusory but mainly my fortuitous sensorium. 

This 'chromatic persistence' reveals how much I revolve as a unit and how the existing and oncoming world do the same within or beyond gravitation. 

The lingual dialects create "perception" while they are multiplied and float around until they are assimilated by the major language or until they vanish completely due to uselessness. 

The ephemeral dialects, though, as formulated cosmic theories until today whereas they use unblushingly the same sense with different meanings so as for the insignificant to become significant and vise versa, are struggling perpetually until they acquire the sense of creativity. 

With a surrealistic disposition in my painting the people, the senses, the situations, the objects are trapped in the footprint of an idea where they change roles of action and thought adopting others-probably new ones so as to acquire conscience of the feasible. This is the way I equate my paintings to the perception I have for "being". 

Lakis Mouratidis