Abstract digital triptychs are more than visuals — they are layered reflections of inner states. “Imago – The Origin of Form” explores how an idea transforms from impulse to clarity.
Some beginnings look like stillness.
Like doubt. Like too many thoughts and no direction.
And yet, that’s often where something real is forming — underneath it all.
We often believe that to create, we must first be certain.
That the idea must come whole, polished, confident.
But most of the time, the opposite is true.
Ideas don’t arrive shouting.
They arrive whispering.
They slip between the cracks of overthinking and unfold slowly, like breath.
What if you allowed yourself to start without knowing exactly where it’s going?
That’s how Imago was created.
A quiet, intuitive process.
Lines, shapes, contrasts — not to impress, but to explore.
This triptych wasn’t meant to scream meaning. It was meant to become meaning, one mark at a time.
And maybe that’s what your idea needs too.
Not clarity. Not a full strategy.
Just permission to appear, however messy or soft it feels.

💬 A reminder, if you needed one:
- You don’t have to wait for everything to make sense.
- You don’t need a full plan to begin.
- You’re allowed to start in silence.
If you resonate with this, you’ll likely love
“Imago – The Origin of Form” – my collector’s edition abstract digital triptych.
It’s not just art for your walls — it’s a quiet reflection of the moment something within you begins to form.





