Pixels

Pixels

The Pixel works are designed to be viewed from a distance first. From afar, the image appears recognizable, almost like a regular portrait. When the viewer comes closer, it reveals itself for what it is: a construction made of many small squares, each coloured by hand.

I was interested in using the language of pixel art not as a simple visual effect, but as a way to show how little the mind needs in order to recognize a face. The brain does not need every detail to understand who it is looking at. It completes the available information and turns a few essential elements into a recognizable figure.

This is why I chose very well-known subjects, figures that have entered the shared imagination. The mechanism works more strongly when the face already belongs to collective memory.

To create these portraits, I start from a digital image reduced to its essential elements. I then draw a grid on the paper and reconstruct each square with coloured pencils, trying to translate the chromatic variety of the screen with a limited number of colours.

In this series, I like to play with the viewer’s perception, inviting them to move closer to and farther away from the work. From a distance, the face seems complete. Up close, it becomes clear that part of the image is not on the paper, but in the mind of the person looking at it.

Ah Ah Ah! Non hai detto la parola magica!