Vampires & Gothic

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The paintings are created in a raw, drawing-based technique in which line, contrast, and texture build the weight of form and the tension of space.

Yet this technique serves above all a story immersed in Gothic aesthetics and the myth of the vampire.

The architecture resembles the ruins of ancient cathedrals and ghost cities — places where time has stopped somewhere between life and death.

Black, white, and deep greys create a world stripped of obvious light, where darkness becomes the natural environment of existence.

The vampires here are not monsters, but guardians of the night, of memory, and of cursed immortality.

Each scene carries a sense of solitude, eternal duration, and melancholy carved into stone and shadow.

Gothic space functions like a psychological landscape — a reflection of fears, desires, and a fascination with what does not fade.

Because of this, the paintings bring into a home an atmosphere of silence, mystery, and dark concentration, as if the night itself had its own breath.

Gallery

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1. Concept & discussion

Everything begins with a meeting or conversation with the client.
It’s the moment when the artist listens closely to the emotions, symbolism, and intention behind the request.
It’s not just about the topic itself (“I want a forest”), but about the meaning — what that forest is meant to tell.

At this stage, the following take shape:

a description of the vision (verbal or symbolic),

a decision about the format and technique,

inspirations (photos, texts, emotions, myth, memory).

2. Concept sketch

The artist creates 2–3 concept sketches (digital or pencil) to show the composition and mood.
The client chooses one direction, or optionally combines elements from several proposals.

This is the stage where the following are defined:

the dominant color palette,

the symbolism (whether figures, elements, or mythological motifs will appear),

the overall rhythm of the painting.

3. Preparing the Surface and Palette

Once the concept is approved, the artist prepares the canvas, primer, color palette, and test color combinations.
They often also create a “light map” — an internal sketch of the directions of energy and emotion within the painting.
This is a stage of technical and spiritual calibration before the actual painting begins.

4. Painting

The first layers are about building mood, not details.
The artist paints through emotion, often listening to music or following the rhythm of their breath.
This is where the atmosphere is born — mist, shadow, light, the main color.

The client may (if they wish) see an initial photo and share their impressions, but without interfering in the creative process.

5. Narrative layers

Once the mood is set, the content begins to appear — a figure, a symbol, a gesture, the relationship between forms.
The artist enters into a dialogue between the client’s vision and their own intuition.
This is the moment when the painting begins to “come alive,” and its meaning becomes multi-layered.

6. Final touches and signature

The final brushstrokes are about calming the composition and giving it rhythm and harmony.
The artist adds their signature — a mark of authenticity, but also a seal of energy.
Once the work is dry, it is varnished and prepared for presentation.

Najczęściej zadawane pytania

Jak mogę odebrać obraz?

Możliwe jest zamówienie obrazu z wysyłką lub zamówienie z odbiorem osobistym w Toruniu.

Jak mogę zamówić Twój obraz?

Zamówienie można złożyć bezpośrednio przez formularz na stronie, stronę na Facebooku, mailowo oraz Allegro.

Czy mogę wybrać kopię obrazu w innym rozmiarze?

Tak, wystarczy zaznaczyć w zamówieniu wymiary obrazu, a ja wykonam reprodukcję w wybranym przez Ciebie rozmiarze.

Mam zdjęcie, które chciał_bym zamienić w obraz. Czy możesz to wykonać?

Tak, wykonuję obrazy na podstawie zdjęć. Wystarczy wysłać zdjęcie drogą elektroniczną lub tradycyjną (w dobrej jakości).