Year of creation | 2022 |
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Dimensions | 45 W × 60 H × 1.8 D cm |
Type of art | painting |
Style | expressionism |
Genre | portrait |
Materials | acrylic, canvas |
Type of packaging | cardboard box |
"Pas assemblé" by Alexander Aksyonov captures a fleeting, weightless moment where form dissolves into dreamlike motion. In a composition brushed with ethereal tones and soft contrasts, the figure appears suspended between steps, as if stitched from fragments of wind and light. The elegant dance movement — traditionally grounded — here feels unmoored, floating through a surreal, shifting space. Textured layers and muted grays create an atmosphere of mystery, while delicate traces of the human figure hint at fleeting emotions. "Pas assemblé" becomes less a single gesture and more an echo of dance itself, immortalized in a moment of beautiful disarray. . The dimensions of the painting are W18 x H24 x D0.7 inches. Acrylic portrait, original work created by Alexander Aksyonov
A professional artistr. His first solo exhibition took place in 1979, where his series of stained glass windows in the student club in Kharkov was presented. He participated in collective exhibitions of artists, competitions, is represented in permanent and personal expositions. He has been a freelance artist since 1991 Alexander has achievements in invention, music, choreography, sports. In 2017 he was the champion of Ukraine in ballroom dancing. Believes that the dance theme is underrepresented in the visual arts. Therefore, in his works often pays attention to dancers, their beauty of spirit and imagination, the beauty of the moment lived in the dance. The artist strives to evoke positive emotions by talking about various life situations using various mediums such as oil, acrylic, watercolor, ink, pigments, pastels, cement, glass and more. His works center on the woman as a dancer, as the main character in depictions of love, anticipation, passion, pain, abandonment, desire and perversion. Alexander defines his works as born out of chaos, confusion and characterized by strong lines, fast, unfinished, scratchy. These intentional designs are meant to attune the viewer to hope, faith in the good and the process of creation. He attempts to convey the artist's own emotions and even human nature, not by conveying the exact image of the object, not by emphasizing the ugly, but by addressing the ambiguous boundary between perfection and incompleteness, emphasizing and directing the viewer's feelings towards the delight of striving for the beautiful