Digital artwork Pale Convenant by Denis Leclerc, translucent veils and pale orange glow, first piece of the Emergence series, limited edition print.

Pale Convenant

Pale Convenant and the Emergence Series

Pale Convenant marks the beginning of the Emergence series. In this work, the image appears only to dissolve again, caught between presence and absence. Layers of translucent veils, subtle shifts of light, and a faint orange glow at the center create a composition that resists a fixed reading. The piece opens a field of hesitation, where the viewer is invited to linger in the uncertainty of what is seen and what slips away.

As a Threshold

The title Pale Convenant suggests both an agreement and a fragility, a contract that cannot be fully sealed. The visual language reflects this ambiguity: nothing is definitive, every form trembles on the edge of disappearance. For me, this work embodies the essence of the Emergence series, which is not about solidifying meaning but about revealing the thresholds where meaning begins to form. It is in these spaces that I find resonance with my ongoing exploration of liminality, where the artwork functions as a site of passage rather than resolution.

Materials, Process, and Presentation

As with my other recent works, Pale Convenant exists in two primary forms. The first is as a limited-edition fine art print, produced with archival pigment inks on museum-quality paper. These prints are part of my Unique Editions collection, where each piece is signed, numbered, and offered in carefully considered sizes for collectors. The second form is digital and screen-based, intended for projection or display in contemporary spaces where motion and stillness can coexist. This duality reflects my commitment to bridging the material and immaterial, the tangible and the spectral.

Within a Contemporary Dialogue

Pale Convenant does not exist in isolation. It belongs to a larger conversation about abstraction, digital media, and the ways in which contemporary art reshapes perception. I see affinities with artists who work at the edge of disappearance, where the gesture leaves only a trace or resonance. The dialogues I follow in international exhibitions such as the Venice Biennale remind me of the necessity of this exploration: art today is less about permanence and more about experience, about fleeting intensities that stay with us in unexpected ways.

Looking Ahead from Pale Convenant

By beginning with Pale Convenant, the Emergence series sets the tone for what lies ahead. Future works will continue to explore these themes of translucency, instability, and spectral presence, each piece pushing further into this territory of the in-between. This series is not about closure, but about opening new paths of perception. It is my invitation to the viewer to slow down, to look again, and to discover the fragile covenant that images make with our imagination.

In many ways, Pale Convenant represents both a beginning and a promise. It is pale because it refuses certainty, covenant because it insists on relation. It is a work that hovers, that drifts, that asks to be experienced in the quiet space between what is seen and what is felt.

Igneous Planes digital abstract artwork by Denis Leclerc, 2025 — fractured planes of colour evoking geological strata, with red, yellow, and violet tones.

Igneous Planes

Exploring Igneous Planes

Igneous Planes concludes a line of research where geology meets abstraction. Rather than depicting a literal landscape, the work stages a field of tensions: fractured planes of colour press against each other like shifting strata, suggesting depth, pressure, and release. The image reads almost from above, as if a terrain had been reduced to its essential forces. Because the composition is stripped of anecdote, every edge, junction, and pause carries weight. As a final piece, it resolves an arc I have been pursuing for some time, while quietly indicating what comes next.

Although the subject feels mineral, the language remains distinctly digital. Layers are built, tested, and pared back. Edges are calibrated so that contact points feel charged but not theatrical. The palette leans into restrained contrasts; however, the small shifts between values and temperatures keep the surface alive. In this way, solidity and instability coexist. The result is a surface that appears carved yet weightless, precise yet open, like a memory of stone rather than stone itself.

Process and Intent

The piece grew from iterative studies of pressure and release. First, broad colour fields defined the underlying mass. Then, controlled ruptures were introduced to create a rhythm of breaks and repairs. Because each intervention leaves a trace, I worked to keep the strata legible without resorting to spectacle. Consequently, the final image feels calm, even when it suggests movement. The aim was not to simulate geology, but to translate its sensations — slowness, compression, drift — into a visual grammar that remains personal and contemporary.

This closing gesture matters because it clarifies a method I can now leave behind. By finishing the series with Igneous Planes, I accept its limits and its strengths. Moreover, the work opens a path toward denser, more suspended presences explored in other directions of my practice. It stands at a threshold: complete in itself, but already oriented toward what follows.

Print Details

High-resolution master suitable for museum-quality printing. Limited edition Giclée on Hahnemühle Photo Rag with archival inks; each print is signed and numbered, with a certificate of authenticity. For formats and availability, see
Unique Editions.

Learn More

Explore other digital abstractions on the site, including the series overview for
Ethereal Solid.
Selected works are also presented on my
Singulart artist page.