Lou Atmån - Ambre - sans titre 01






Holds a master’s in art history with over 10 years in auctions and galleries.
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Lou Atmån’s limited edition art print Ambre - sans titre 01, a 40 × 32 cm nude photograph produced in 2024 on FineArt Platinum Fibre paper using digital inkjet/IA technique, signed, edition 4/25, with a certificate of authenticity, sold directly from the artist.
Description from the seller
This photograph from the "Amber" series was created by the artist in 2025. It is offered exclusively on the Catawiki website. It is available as FineArt Print on Platinum Fibre paper. This print exhibits the look and feel of the renowned baryte paper associated with pure white, which has established the reputation of the greatest photographers. It is a 100% cotton museum-quality paper that provides deep blacks and exceptional color reproduction. It is especially suited for demanding fine art photography. This signed 40x32 cm print is part of a limited edition (/25). It comes with a certificate of authenticity.
The artist has exhibited in numerous contemporary art salons in France and abroad. Her recognized photographic work is part of private collections. She has received international awards, granting her recognition in the art community.
Amber series :
In an underwater ballet, a woman with fiery hair, dressed in a diaphanous gown, appears to blend with the blue, luminous wave surrounding her. Every movement, full of grace, evokes a nereid dancing in the depths, where mystery and beauty intertwine. The transparency of her dress caresses the water, revealing a delicate sensuality, while the light plays on her silhouette with subtle and mesmerizing poetry. A suspended scene, between dream and reality, where elegance flirts with eternity.
Lou's photographs resemble riddles. The bodies are fragmented, blurred; they reveal themselves or hide, playing with what we know of them to tell something else. But tell what? First of all, impressions: in the Opaline series, the fleeting happiness of an apparition, that of a solitary landscape fragment stolen from darkness [...] What truly remains of the body is the eroticism of this photographed skin, with much modesty, like a caress, delicate as a whisper. By becoming only pure form, pure image composition, its surface expresses the invisible that animates it but refuses to name it. It merely seeks the gaze, this quest for the gaze as metamorphosis.
Hannibal Volkoff – exhibition commissioner
This photograph from the "Amber" series was created by the artist in 2025. It is offered exclusively on the Catawiki website. It is available as FineArt Print on Platinum Fibre paper. This print exhibits the look and feel of the renowned baryte paper associated with pure white, which has established the reputation of the greatest photographers. It is a 100% cotton museum-quality paper that provides deep blacks and exceptional color reproduction. It is especially suited for demanding fine art photography. This signed 40x32 cm print is part of a limited edition (/25). It comes with a certificate of authenticity.
The artist has exhibited in numerous contemporary art salons in France and abroad. Her recognized photographic work is part of private collections. She has received international awards, granting her recognition in the art community.
Amber series :
In an underwater ballet, a woman with fiery hair, dressed in a diaphanous gown, appears to blend with the blue, luminous wave surrounding her. Every movement, full of grace, evokes a nereid dancing in the depths, where mystery and beauty intertwine. The transparency of her dress caresses the water, revealing a delicate sensuality, while the light plays on her silhouette with subtle and mesmerizing poetry. A suspended scene, between dream and reality, where elegance flirts with eternity.
Lou's photographs resemble riddles. The bodies are fragmented, blurred; they reveal themselves or hide, playing with what we know of them to tell something else. But tell what? First of all, impressions: in the Opaline series, the fleeting happiness of an apparition, that of a solitary landscape fragment stolen from darkness [...] What truly remains of the body is the eroticism of this photographed skin, with much modesty, like a caress, delicate as a whisper. By becoming only pure form, pure image composition, its surface expresses the invisible that animates it but refuses to name it. It merely seeks the gaze, this quest for the gaze as metamorphosis.
Hannibal Volkoff – exhibition commissioner
