Ascension Bridge at Lightfall
Ascension Bridge at Lightfall
(from the Crossing Series)
This artwork envisions spiritual evolution not as an escape from the world, but as a forward leap within it. There is no decay here, no looming dystopia—only elevation, where peace and progress walk hand in hand.
Inspired by metaphysical traditions, the cityscape becomes more than a setting. It transforms into a bridge between realms—a luminous threshold symbolizing the quiet, powerful transition into a new state of being.
This moment in time is called lightfall—when illumination doesn’t just descend from the heavens, but rises from within. The tanslucent architecture requires no windows, because light passes through, illuminating everything—including souls alike.
Hand-finished collage of generated and composited elements. Directed, assembled, and finalized by the artist.
Prevalent Art Styles & Influences
1. Luminous Urban Surrealism
Overview: A surreal interpretation of the contemporary cityscape — where architecture becomes symbolic, and light becomes language. This piece blends realism with metaphysical suggestion, inviting the viewer to read the skyline as a passage, not a place.
Key influences: Salvador Dalí, Giorgio de Chirico, and René Magritte.
2. Futuristic Symbolism
Overview: Drawing from Symbolist traditions but cast into the future, this style uses layered geometry, celestial cues, and spatial metaphors to evoke the soul’s passage through transformation. Meaning unfolds gradually—through symmetry, space, and silence.
Key influences: Odilon Redon, Kazimir Malevich, and James Turrell.
3. Metaphysical Minimalism
Overview: Here, simplicity becomes sacred. The clean forms and luminous gradients whisper rather than shout, offering contemplative space for the viewer to arrive. It’s not about what’s depicted, but what’s felt in the stillness between forms.
Key influences: Mark Rothko, and Barnett Newman.
4. Cosmological Abstraction
Overview: This approach views the cosmos not as scenery, but as structure. Stars and nebulae take on architectural function, shaping emotional architecture. In this work, abstraction holds gravity—light curves, matter dissolves, and scale becomes fluid.
Key influences: Hilma af Klint, and Athanasius Kircher.
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