Until death do them part... by Luiz Henrique Ribeiro de Oliveira (Brazil)
ENTRY DESCRIPTION
The garden, once a refuge of happiness, has become the stage for a dark narrative of justice and redemption. The withered flowers and dense shadows around bear witness to the final moment, where past love is subverted into a symbol of bitter liberation. The woman, motionless as a statue, is not merely a figure of mourning but of resolve. Her final offer is not one of sustenance, but of denial, a last and powerful affirmation that what was once given will now be forever withheld.
AUTHOR
Biography
Born in the shadows of the uncommon and raised on the fringes of society, LHenrique found his calling in the depths of what many would consider macabre. With a vision that transcends the conventional, Luiz Henrique turns taboo into beauty, death into life, and aberrations into art.
From an early age, Luiz Henrique was captivated by the silent eternity that death offers. He saw each end as a new beginning, each farewell as an introduction to an unknown world.
Influenced by the work of Joel Peter Witkin, Luiz Henrique adopted black and white as his color palette, finding in the absence of color the true essence. Each piece of art is a play, where the grotesque becomes graceful and the strange becomes sublime.
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