In this digital artwork, the chandelier no longer appears as an object, but as an idea detached from its material origins. The golden arms and curved lines sparkle in symmetrical patterns, while their brilliance is filtered through the digital gaze. Not an exact representation, but a transformation: from tangible to imaginary, from matter to pixel.
The editing moves the chandelier from function to meaning. Where it once illuminated a room, here it stands alone, stripped of utility. The points of light are not candles, but icons of brightness, fixed and abstracted. The dark background enhances this effect: it is not the surroundings that are illuminated, but the phenomenon of light itself that is questioned.
At the same time, the work follows a long tradition in art history. For centuries, painting tried to capture light with brush and pigment. Later, photography offered a mechanical truth, in which light was registered in silver and chemistry. Now, in the digital phase, that same light appears as data, made up of pixels. The work thus exposes a shift: each medium constructs its own form of reality, and each time the viewer has to recalibrate his gaze.
The chandelier thus becomes more than an ornament or utensil. It embodies the transition from heaviness to weightlessness: from bronze and crystal to the glow of the screen. What remains is a symbol of transformation, where tradition meets technology. The artwork invites us to reflect on the question: what remains of light when it detaches itself from reality?
Address: Lofoten 101, 3524 EP Utrecht
Lamplicht courtesy of freepik.com
Digital artwork of your own design
Ready on: 4 October 2025
I think the world is beautiful in many ways. I want to show that with my work. I make my subjects sparkle extra with idealisation... Read more…