About

{"ops":[{"insert":"Hellariusz Fanny is a graphic designer and illustrator based in Indonesia whose practice weaves together the emotional, the abstract, the surreal, and the real into a unified visual language. Drawing from the intricate layers of human life, Fanny’s work explores how inner landscapes—memories, sensations, fears, and quiet hopes—can be made visible through form, color, and texture.At the core of Fanny’s practice is a deep engagement with emotional states, often translated into compositions that feel both dreamlike and grounded. The works embrace ambiguity: figures dissolve into shapes, spaces fold into one another, and boundaries between the conscious and the subconscious blur. This approach allows each image to sit at the threshold between reality and imagination, inviting viewers to inhabit that in-between place where interpretation becomes personal and intimate.Recurring motifs—root systems, dense forests, lunar presences, and elemental forms—speak to a sense of being “rooted” within the earth and within one’s own history. The visual language is often forest-bound and lunar: shadowed light, muted palettes, and subtle contrasts evoke the stillness of night and the quiet power of earth memory. These images do not merely depict scenes; they evoke atmospheres, tracing the invisible connections between people, places, and time.Fanny’s compositions frequently juxtapose soft, organic lines with sharper graphic elements, reflecting the tension between vulnerability and structure, chaos and order. This dynamic interplay underscores a central preoccupation of the work: how to give shape to emotions that resist direct representation. In doing so, Fanny seeks to create visual spaces where viewers can recognize fragments of their own experiences, even when confronted with abstract or surreal forms.Ultimately, Hellariusz Fanny’s practice is an ongoing investigation of how human emotion and lived reality can be distilled into visual narratives that feel both elemental and ephemeral. Through shadowed light, night stillness, and echoes of the natural world, the work aspires to offer a quiet, contemplative refuge—an invitation to pause, feel, and remember.\n"}]}