A journey shaped by passion, creativity, and the belief.

A Belgian painter whose practice is rooted in an intuitive sensitivity to color and abstraction. Her work explores the delicate balance between emotional instinct and deliberate control, allowing each composition to unfold with quiet confidence and depth.

Her artistic language has evolved organically—from early realist foundations to increasingly expressive semi-abstract forms, and ultimately toward a mature abstract practice shaped by accumulated experience and inner momentum. This progression is not abrupt, but layered, revealing a sustained inquiry into emotion, movement, and visual harmony.

BRIVAN’s oeuvre centers on two principal directions: expansive, liberated abstract paintings, and semi-abstract works imbued with narrative resonance. Across these series, the viewer is invited to observe not only the finished image, but the process itself—each brushstroke marking a moment of decision, hesitation, or release.

Within her canvases, one may sense strength and stillness, transience and intensity, anger and joy. These states do not compete, but coexist—collectively forming a visual archive of life’s fragile and essential moments.

The instant when the brush first meets the canvas is both decisive and fleeting.

BRIVAN’s work invites us to pause, to observe, and to engage with that moment in all its quiet complexity.

BRIVAN

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Born with an innate sensitivity to beauty, the artist spent many years exploring the world through the textures and colors of oil paint. Her style, grounded in semi-realism, allowed each scene she painted—whether drawn from memory, observation, or pure imagination—to carry a layer of her own emotion, gently woven into the original essence of the view.

As age gradually guided her away from the easel, she chose to set aside the tools of her craft. Yet the stories she painted—echoes of places she loved, imagined, and transformed—continue to live quietly on every canvas she touched.

VERCA

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“I never limit my time with a painting, knowing I’ll always want to add one more stroke. But somehow, there comes the moment you just know”