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Sammy SlabbinckSammy Slabbinck reassembles mid-century imagery into surrealist collages that feel like half-remembered dreams. In this work, a solitary nude figure is positioned within a vast, muted landscape, inviting a gaze that is both intimate and strangely distant.

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Sammy Slabbinck reassembles mid-century imagery into surrealist collages that feel like half-remembered dreams. In this work, a solitary nude figure is positioned within a vast, muted landscape, inviting a gaze that is both intimate and strangely distant.
A meaningful share of this purchase goes directly to Sammy Slabbinck.
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Art Analysis
A surrealist window into the cost of the gaze
Slabbinck utilizes a retro aesthetic to explore complex realities through the medium of collage. By placing a solitary figure against a backdrop of muted pastels, the artist creates a sense of spatial exploration that feels both three-dimensional and flat. The vintage textures ground the surrealist concepts, making the enigmatic puzzle of the composition feel like a found artifact from a forgotten era.
The work invites diverse perspectives on the theme of isolation in nature. Rather than a simple portrait, the arrangement suggests an intellectual pursuit of meaning, where the classic frame contains a world of abstract concepts. It is a reflective design that asks the viewer to consider the price of looking and the weight of being seen in an empty, expansive space.
Lerson blends vintage imagery with celestial elements to create a dreamlike scene that defies gravity.
A soft, desaturated palette creates a dreamlike atmosphere that softens the impact of the solitary figure's isolation.
The work uses the vastness of the desert to represent a mental space where one is free from external judgment and pain.
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