Painting is no longer understood as representation of reality, but as a living system of simultaneous emotional states.
After Cultural Resistance – Mon Petit Louvre, the project enters a new phase: Parallel Emotional Systems (PES).
Painting as a system, not an image.
In PES, each artwork is not constructed as a single narrative, but as a coexistence of multiple internal realities. Each painting operates through four simultaneous layers: memory, energy, symbols and deconstruction.
These layers do not illustrate each other. They interact, collide and destabilize the visual field.
Parallel emotionality:
Human perception is not linear. Emotions do not appear one after another. PES translates this psychological structure into painting: multiple emotional systems coexist on the same surface.
The artwork becomes a space where contradiction is not resolved, but sustained.
From image to structure:
Traditional painting tends to stabilize meaning. PES does the opposite: it transforms painting into an open structure of tensions.
The image disappears as an end in itself. What remains is a field of forces — unstable, layered and active.
Technique as language:
The visual language of PES is constructed through hybrid methods: acrylic as structural force, watercolor as memory layer, graphic elements as symbolic code, and deconstruction as compositional act.
Each material is not decorative, but functional within the emotional system.
Cultural continuity:
PES is not an isolated concept. It develops the logic initiated in MON PETIT LOUVRE – Cultural Resistance, shifting the focus from cultural narrative to internal perception, from external resistance to internal architecture of perception.
Conclusion:
Parallel Emotional Systems propose a new way of thinking painting: not as image, but as coexistence of emotional realities; not as representation, but as structure; not as composition, but as system.