What draws you to portraying your subjects in intimate everyday
settings, such as messy bedrooms? What do these scenes allow you to
explore about your subjects that a traditional still life set up might not?
From the very beginning, I was drawn to the human figure and to the emotional
intensity you can concentrate within it. I was always more interested in people than
in objects. Interestingly, to be admitted to the Faculty of Fine Arts at the time, we had
to pass a four-hour drawing exam based on a very complex, classical still life —
charcoal, heavy focus on shadows, volume, and accuracy. To prepare for that exam, I spent an entire summer at an old academy in Barcelona called Escola Leonardo da Vinci, where a wonderful elderly teacher taught me the fundamentals of observation. I produced dozens of drawings just to be able to pass that still-life test. I learned a great deal from that experience, but it also left me slightly tired of traditional still life, and afterwards I naturally shifted my focus back to the human figure and modern artists. Intimate and domestic scenes came very naturally to me. I’m interested in the simplicity of everyday life at home — the ordinary objects that surround you, friends hanging out, laundry baskets, a coffee maker. These settings allow emotions and relationships to appear quietly, without being staged. In a way, there’s a contradiction in my work: I’ve found a lot of inspiration through living in many different cities, yet what I enjoy drawing most is the private, familiar world of home. Those intimate spaces allow me to explore vulnerability, closeness, and lived experience in a way a traditional still-life setup never could.