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Transhuman Art combines historical research and artificial intelligence to create works that could have existed but were never produced.
The machine expands imagination, but the human eye defines authenticity and emotion. It is the bridge between past, present, and future, preserving the essence of human creation in the technological age.

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Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio - 1571 - 1610

Caravaggio (1571–1610) was a revolutionary Italian painter whose dramatic realism and masterful use of chiaroscuro transformed Baroque art. Rejecting Renaissance idealization, he portrayed biblical and mythological scenes with raw emotion, striking naturalism, and intense contrasts of light and shadow, as seen in works like The Calling of Saint Matthew and Judith Beheading Holofernes. As a true rebellious genius, Caravaggio lived a turbulent life marked by gambling, brawls, and a fatal duel that led to exile. His uncompromising vision and pursuit of truth in art left an enduring influence, and his death at just 38 only amplified the enduring legend surrounding his name.

Available Work

"Her Last Day" is a highly detailed cinematic moment depicting the last seconds of a living Medusa where she is about to be beheaded by Perseus... This is a pristine, hand painted oil on canvas artwork, with subtle and very rich details. A photographic moment captured on ink. 

Size: 96 X 156 CM

(framed)

Our interpretation of the artist...

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Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres - 1780 - 1867

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres was a French Neoclassical master celebrated for his precise draftsmanship, refined lines, and devotion to classical ideals. A student of Jacques-Louis David, he blended rigorous academic technique with a personal, almost obsessive pursuit of perfection in form. His portraits, such as La Grande Odalisque and Portrait of Madame Moitessier, reveal both meticulous detail and a subtle sensuality, while his history paintings reflect his deep admiration for antiquity and the Renaissance.

Though often in conflict with Romantic trends of his time, Ingres remained steadfast in his belief that drawing was the soul of art. His disciplined approach and commitment to harmony influenced generations of artists, securing his place as one of the defining figures of 19th-century French painting. Revered and sometimes criticized for his uncompromising vision, he left a legacy that bridges the grandeur of the past with the evolving sensibilities of modern art.

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Available Work

“Young Leonardo”
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (imagined, 1819–1820)
Oil on canvas, 142 × 96 cm (framed)

In this imagined masterpiece, Ingres portrays a youthful Leonardo da Vinci at the height of his visionary spirit. Arms outstretched toward the sky, with delicate wings of bamboo and linen, Leonardo embodies invention, ambition, and limitless imagination. Rendered with the precision and elegance characteristic of Ingres, the work celebrates the union of artistic mastery and human ingenuity, capturing the genius of a young Renaissance dreamer poised between Earth and sky.

Ingres & Young Leonardo

Ingres saw in the great masters of the past a reflection of ideals that transcended his own time. Painting a young Leonardo, with wings of bamboo and linen, would represent the visionary and experimental spirit of the Renaissance — something Ingres deeply admired.

Here, Leonardo is not only a painter, but also an inventor and dreamer, embodying the universal genius.

Arms open to the sky evoke aspiration, freedom, and transcendence — values that Ingres, even bound by Neoclassical rigor, secretly admired.

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Vincent Van Gogh - 1853 - 1890

Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) was a Dutch Post-Impressionist painter whose vibrant colors, dynamic brushwork, and emotional depth transformed the language of modern art. In just over a decade, he produced more than 2,000 works, among them masterpieces like Starry Night, Sunflowers, and The Bedroom. His art expressed an intense connection with nature, everyday life, and the human spirit, offering a vision that was both deeply personal and universally moving.

Though he faced moments of personal struggle, van Gogh remained passionately committed to his craft, constantly experimenting with color, light, and form. His bold style, initially overlooked, would later inspire countless artists and shape the future of painting. Today, van Gogh is remembered as a visionary who turned emotion into beauty, leaving behind a legacy that continues to resonate with audiences worldwide.

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Available Work

"Lanterns of Solitude"
Vincent van Gogh (imagined, Auvers-sur-Oise, 1890)
Oil on canvas, 73 × 92 cm (fictitious)

In this imagined nocturne, Van Gogh renders a winding country road illuminated by a procession of light poles, their globes glowing like living flames amid the golden foliage. The scene is bathed in deep blues and yellows, with the moon suspended above in a sky of restless swirls.

Rather than fierce fire, the light here radiates a quiet pulse — fragile, human-made stars echoing the cosmos above. The empty road heightens the sense of solitude, while the glowing poles suggest fleeting warmth and companionship within the vast, shadowed countryside. With expressive strokes and vibrant contrasts, Van Gogh turns a simple row of lights into a meditation on longing, hope, and the tenuous beauty of illumination in darkness.

In this imagined nocturne, a winding country road is lit by a procession of 19th-century light poles whose globes emit a gentle, living glow. Their warm halos skim the tall grasses and cast long, restless shadows beneath a deep, swirling night sky. The empty path intensifies the sense of solitude, while the glowing poles suggest fragile companionship—van Gogh’s meditation on hope held against darkness, rendered with impassioned brushwork in vivid yellows and deep blues.

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