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"Queens" room concept - Ladys-Power - 8 works, each 30x40cm - Additional services, see description
8 mixed media oil paintings, presented in two groups of four; dimensions 30×40cm each, white frame, ready to hang;
with original fossils, crystal incorporated
Additional service: Presence of the artist at an aperitif planned by you for the opening of the room; billed separately according to a previously agreed fee.
The name ammonite is reminiscent of the ancient Egyptian god Amun, whose ram's horns reminded the people of antiquity of the spiral shape of the fossils. Pliny the Elder already called them Ammonis cornua, thus associating them with the divine. I imagine a queen whose crown is not made of metal, but of the spiral shape of times long past. The ammonites sit on her head like memories, each coil a generation, each rib a report from the depths. In my pictures, I bring this crown to the page as visible thought: not just as jewelry, but as a chronicle, as power that grows out of age and permanence.
Queen with ammonite crown in purple brown
Queen with ammonite crown in green
Queen with ammonite crown in pink and gray
Queen with ammonite crown in orange
Queen with ammonite crown in yellow
Queen with ammonite crown in black and gold
Queen with ammonite crown in blue
Queen with ammonite crown in gold
The interpretation of the colors of the queens
I see violet as the color of the transition between power and mysticism. For this queen, violet represents spiritual authority, the awareness that leadership also means preserving history and mystery.
Green symbolizes renewal and healing. A green-crowned queen combines the elemental power of the earth with care; her reign is sustainable, nurturing, and growth-oriented.
Pink shows the gentle form of strength: empathy, intercession, and tender power. The pink crown whispers of tenderness and of an authority that binds rather than divides.
Orange pulsates with vitality and energy. An orange crown is an invitation to action, to warmth in leadership, to the energy that drives communities.
Yellow radiates clarity and insight. The yellow queen reigns with light, bringing visibility and orientation to the landscapes of thought.
Black is elegance; it is weight, depth, and protection. The queen with the black ammonite crown bears the weight of responsibility and the calm that comes from knowing about loss and gain.
Blue breathes vastness and prudence. The blue queen is a mediator, guardian of vastness — she maintains distance and closeness at the same time, like the sea that once carried ammonites.
Gold connects the earthly fossil with royal transcendence. Golden accents elevate the queen's ammonite crown to iconic status: honor, heritage, and the light that arises from permanence.
8 mixed media oil paintings, presented in two groups of four; dimensions 30×40cm each, white frame, ready to hang;
with original fossils, crystal incorporated
Additional service: Presence of the artist at an aperitif planned by you for the opening of the room; billed separately according to a previously agreed fee.
The name ammonite is reminiscent of the ancient Egyptian god Amun, whose ram's horns reminded the people of antiquity of the spiral shape of the fossils. Pliny the Elder already called them Ammonis cornua, thus associating them with the divine. I imagine a queen whose crown is not made of metal, but of the spiral shape of times long past. The ammonites sit on her head like memories, each coil a generation, each rib a report from the depths. In my pictures, I bring this crown to the page as visible thought: not just as jewelry, but as a chronicle, as power that grows out of age and permanence.
Queen with ammonite crown in purple brown
Queen with ammonite crown in green
Queen with ammonite crown in pink and gray
Queen with ammonite crown in orange
Queen with ammonite crown in yellow
Queen with ammonite crown in black and gold
Queen with ammonite crown in blue
Queen with ammonite crown in gold
The interpretation of the colors of the queens
I see violet as the color of the transition between power and mysticism. For this queen, violet represents spiritual authority, the awareness that leadership also means preserving history and mystery.
Green symbolizes renewal and healing. A green-crowned queen combines the elemental power of the earth with care; her reign is sustainable, nurturing, and growth-oriented.
Pink shows the gentle form of strength: empathy, intercession, and tender power. The pink crown whispers of tenderness and of an authority that binds rather than divides.
Orange pulsates with vitality and energy. An orange crown is an invitation to action, to warmth in leadership, to the energy that drives communities.
Yellow radiates clarity and insight. The yellow queen reigns with light, bringing visibility and orientation to the landscapes of thought.
Black is elegance; it is weight, depth, and protection. The queen with the black ammonite crown bears the weight of responsibility and the calm that comes from knowing about loss and gain.
Blue breathes vastness and prudence. The blue queen is a mediator, guardian of vastness — she maintains distance and closeness at the same time, like the sea that once carried ammonites.
Gold connects the earthly fossil with royal transcendence. Golden accents elevate the queen's ammonite crown to iconic status: honor, heritage, and the light that arises from permanence.