
Welcome to a moment of my process.
In this image, I invite you to step into the heart of one of my architectural studies — a visual dialogue between the first impulse and the refined intention. What you see is not just a sketch and a drawing. It’s a layered reflection of how an idea evolves, how structure emerges from emotion, and how Eldor Art seeks meaning through precision.
The background sketch, rendered on aged paper, is my raw meditation — the first breath of the project. It’s where I allow intuition to speak freely. The lines are loose, the proportions speculative, the ornamentation symbolic. Columns rise like memories, pediments echo forgotten rituals, and every flourish is a question. This is where I begin: not with answers, but with atmosphere.
In the foreground, the drawing becomes more deliberate. Here, I begin to shape the structure with care. The lines are measured, the symmetry intentional, and the details sharpened. It’s not yet the final version, but it’s the moment where the poetic impulse meets architectural discipline. I’m no longer just imagining — I’m constructing.
This duality is essential to my work. Eldor Art is not about decoration. It’s about narrative embedded in form. I draw inspiration from historical figures like Jean-Jacques Lequeu, whose precision was never sterile, but always symbolic. Like him, I believe that every architectural element can carry meaning — if treated with respect and intention.
This project is part of a broader exploration: how can we build images that speak, not just visually, but emotionally and intellectually? I want my work to feel alive — not because it moves, but because it resonates. And that resonance begins here, in the tension between the sketch and the drawing, between freedom and structure.
By sharing this moment with you, I’m not just showing technique. I’m opening a window into my process. I want you to see the scaffolding behind the final image — the choices, the revisions, the quiet hours of reflection. Because for me, art is not just what you see. It’s what you feel when you understand how it was made.
Thank you for stepping into this space with me.
