Tijs Dragtsma (1992) - What Darkness Yields






Over 10 years' experience in art trade and previously founded his own gallery.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 136909 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
What Darkness Yields is a 2026 mixed‑media artwork by Dutch artist Tijs Dragtsma, 51 × 51 cm, sold with frame, Original edition, signed, in black and white, created in the Netherlands for the contemporary period 2020+.
Description from the seller
What Darkness Yields is a contemporary artwork about emergence, restraint, and the quiet power that forms in the absence of light.
The swan does not arrive. It surfaces. Wings held low and wide, body close to black water, it occupies a posture that is neither flight nor stillness. There is something ancient in this tension, an elegance that knows its own weight and refuses to surrender it.
No paint. No ink. No print. The image is built from controlled surface damage on acrylic glass, and it appears the way all withheld things appear: gradually, conditionally, only when the light agrees. Each scratch catches that light differently, pulling feather and reflection from the dark, then releasing them back as the viewer shifts. The swan moves between presence and near-absence with every change of angle.
From across a room, the work reads as a single, monumental image. Feathers. Water. Stillness loaded with intention. Move closer, and the figure dissolves into a field of controlled scratches, the illusion giving way to pure structure. The picture lives in that threshold.
The swan has carried old meaning for a long time. Beauty held in tension with danger. Grace that does not apologize. In this work, that duality is not illustrated but embedded in the surface itself. The image is not given freely. It yields, slowly, through damage and light, exactly as its title promises.
What Darkness Yields continues the Art with Scratch series by Tijs Dragtsma, in which imagery is constructed through controlled surface damage rather than pigment or print. A visual language where damage is not destruction, but structure.
"What the dark holds, it gives only in fragments, and only to those patient enough to remain."
About Art with Scratch
Art with Scratch is a body of work in which the image is not drawn, but released. Carved line by line into a deep black surface, each work emerges through countless precise scratches that catch the light and bring form out of darkness.
From a distance, the image appears almost photographic. Powerful, recognisable and full of presence. Yet up close, the work dissolves into thousands of individual marks. Fine, fragile and almost weightless. What seemed solid reveals itself as a delicate web of lines, each one a deliberate gesture, each one essential to the whole.
Light is what gives this work its life. The black surface absorbs, while the scratched lines reflect. As light shifts across the surface, the image breathes. From one angle the figure stands clear and defined. From another it softens, recedes, almost disappears into the darkness from which it came. Under a focused spotlight, the contrast deepens and the image takes on a sculptural, almost luminous quality.
What makes this medium so compelling is its quiet tension. The act of scratching is direct and irreversible. Every line is a decision that cannot be undone. Yet the result is not harsh. It is intimate, atmospheric and alive with movement. Hardness becomes softness. Destruction becomes creation. Absence becomes presence.
In works such as this portrait, the figure is never fully fixed. Through the interplay of line, light and shadow, the image shifts with perspective and atmosphere. At certain moments, the subject seems to step forward out of the black. At others, it retreats, leaving only a whisper of form. It is within that movement, between visibility and disappearance, that the work comes alive.
Like all materials touched by time, the surface carries its own quiet life. Each scratch holds a moment, a breath, a gesture. Together they form not just an image, but a presence, one that continues to reveal itself with every change of light.
About the Artist
My name is Tijs Dragtsma, founder of TD Fine Art Studio.
As an artist, I am driven by a constant desire to explore new visual languages. I do not see art as a fixed style, but as an evolving field of discovery where material, structure, light and emotion come together.
My work often begins with a simple question. How can a material speak in a new way. How can hardness become intimacy. How can precision create emotion. That search lies at the heart of everything I create.
Within TD Fine Art Studio, each body of work is approached as its own world, with its own logic, atmosphere and visual identity. Some works are built through rhythm, repetition and structure. Others emerge through absence, shadow, reflection or tension. What connects them is a shared commitment to originality, clarity and emotional presence.
I am fascinated by contrast. Between strength and fragility. Between control and feeling. Between what is visible and what is left open to interpretation. My goal is not simply to make an image, but to create a work that holds attention, invites reflection and continues to reveal itself over time.
TD Fine Art Studio is the space in which these explorations come together. It is not only a studio, but an evolving artistic universe shaped by curiosity, precision and the ambition to create work that feels distinctive, intentional and alive.
What Darkness Yields is a contemporary artwork about emergence, restraint, and the quiet power that forms in the absence of light.
The swan does not arrive. It surfaces. Wings held low and wide, body close to black water, it occupies a posture that is neither flight nor stillness. There is something ancient in this tension, an elegance that knows its own weight and refuses to surrender it.
No paint. No ink. No print. The image is built from controlled surface damage on acrylic glass, and it appears the way all withheld things appear: gradually, conditionally, only when the light agrees. Each scratch catches that light differently, pulling feather and reflection from the dark, then releasing them back as the viewer shifts. The swan moves between presence and near-absence with every change of angle.
From across a room, the work reads as a single, monumental image. Feathers. Water. Stillness loaded with intention. Move closer, and the figure dissolves into a field of controlled scratches, the illusion giving way to pure structure. The picture lives in that threshold.
The swan has carried old meaning for a long time. Beauty held in tension with danger. Grace that does not apologize. In this work, that duality is not illustrated but embedded in the surface itself. The image is not given freely. It yields, slowly, through damage and light, exactly as its title promises.
What Darkness Yields continues the Art with Scratch series by Tijs Dragtsma, in which imagery is constructed through controlled surface damage rather than pigment or print. A visual language where damage is not destruction, but structure.
"What the dark holds, it gives only in fragments, and only to those patient enough to remain."
About Art with Scratch
Art with Scratch is a body of work in which the image is not drawn, but released. Carved line by line into a deep black surface, each work emerges through countless precise scratches that catch the light and bring form out of darkness.
From a distance, the image appears almost photographic. Powerful, recognisable and full of presence. Yet up close, the work dissolves into thousands of individual marks. Fine, fragile and almost weightless. What seemed solid reveals itself as a delicate web of lines, each one a deliberate gesture, each one essential to the whole.
Light is what gives this work its life. The black surface absorbs, while the scratched lines reflect. As light shifts across the surface, the image breathes. From one angle the figure stands clear and defined. From another it softens, recedes, almost disappears into the darkness from which it came. Under a focused spotlight, the contrast deepens and the image takes on a sculptural, almost luminous quality.
What makes this medium so compelling is its quiet tension. The act of scratching is direct and irreversible. Every line is a decision that cannot be undone. Yet the result is not harsh. It is intimate, atmospheric and alive with movement. Hardness becomes softness. Destruction becomes creation. Absence becomes presence.
In works such as this portrait, the figure is never fully fixed. Through the interplay of line, light and shadow, the image shifts with perspective and atmosphere. At certain moments, the subject seems to step forward out of the black. At others, it retreats, leaving only a whisper of form. It is within that movement, between visibility and disappearance, that the work comes alive.
Like all materials touched by time, the surface carries its own quiet life. Each scratch holds a moment, a breath, a gesture. Together they form not just an image, but a presence, one that continues to reveal itself with every change of light.
About the Artist
My name is Tijs Dragtsma, founder of TD Fine Art Studio.
As an artist, I am driven by a constant desire to explore new visual languages. I do not see art as a fixed style, but as an evolving field of discovery where material, structure, light and emotion come together.
My work often begins with a simple question. How can a material speak in a new way. How can hardness become intimacy. How can precision create emotion. That search lies at the heart of everything I create.
Within TD Fine Art Studio, each body of work is approached as its own world, with its own logic, atmosphere and visual identity. Some works are built through rhythm, repetition and structure. Others emerge through absence, shadow, reflection or tension. What connects them is a shared commitment to originality, clarity and emotional presence.
I am fascinated by contrast. Between strength and fragility. Between control and feeling. Between what is visible and what is left open to interpretation. My goal is not simply to make an image, but to create a work that holds attention, invites reflection and continues to reveal itself over time.
TD Fine Art Studio is the space in which these explorations come together. It is not only a studio, but an evolving artistic universe shaped by curiosity, precision and the ambition to create work that feels distinctive, intentional and alive.
