Francien Krieg - “Collected Tenderness”






Holds a bachelor’s degree in art history and led modern and contemporary post-war art at Bonhams.
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Original Surrealist AI digital print titled “Collected Tenderness” (2026), a portrait in excellent condition, 40 cm high by 30 cm wide, from the Netherlands, hand-signed, produced directly from the artist, date of print 2026.
Description from the seller
In these works I play with the boundary between image and object.
I create trompe-l’œil wall panels that behave like small cabinets on the wall. Through the form, the shadows, and the open doors, a space arises that doesn’t really exist, but is tangible. As if you could step into it.
The work is essentially flat, but I want it to behave like something physical. Something that both recedes and comes forward. That does not reveal itself entirely.
I place the figures in a protected, framed world. Not confined, but shielded. For me, that cabinet is a mental space. A place between inside and outside. Between being seen and preserving yourself.
Flowers and butterflies do not appear as explanatory symbols, but as quiet companions. They carry something fragile within them. Something temporary. Perhaps they are there just to encourage a more attentive looking.
What interests me is that moment when proximity and distance exist at the same time. What feels close is sometimes carefully guarded.
Seller's Story
In these works I play with the boundary between image and object.
I create trompe-l’œil wall panels that behave like small cabinets on the wall. Through the form, the shadows, and the open doors, a space arises that doesn’t really exist, but is tangible. As if you could step into it.
The work is essentially flat, but I want it to behave like something physical. Something that both recedes and comes forward. That does not reveal itself entirely.
I place the figures in a protected, framed world. Not confined, but shielded. For me, that cabinet is a mental space. A place between inside and outside. Between being seen and preserving yourself.
Flowers and butterflies do not appear as explanatory symbols, but as quiet companions. They carry something fragile within them. Something temporary. Perhaps they are there just to encourage a more attentive looking.
What interests me is that moment when proximity and distance exist at the same time. What feels close is sometimes carefully guarded.
