Siren — Along the Amalfi Coast

The Siren Digital Art Series is rooted in the landscape of the Amalfi Coast, where steep cliffs fall directly into the sea and where each rock wall seems to hold its own quiet echo. This journey echoed the nineteenth-century tradition of artists undertaking formative travels to Italy — a search for light, ruins, and inner transformation. The coast became a contemporary equivalent of that rite of passage: a place where the terrain itself suggested a mythic vibration.

The series draws on the ancient story of the sirens — fierce, avian creatures whose voices lured sailors toward danger. A key visual point of reference remains Ulysses and the Sirens (1891) by John William Waterhouse.

Rather than illustrating the sirens directly, the series approaches the myth through a non-figurative, digital language, focusing on the tension between call and distance, attraction and self-control.

A Suspended State

Each composition acts as a snapshot of a suspended moment — an instant where movement, breath, and resonance gather without resolving. The works hold the stillness that exists inside the call itself, as if the myth had been paused at the threshold of its unfolding.

In this way, Siren becomes an abstract echo of the original story: a space where sound turns into texture, where light behaves like a voice, and where the landscape offers its own form of seduction.

Availability and Editions

The Siren Digital Art Series is available as limited-edition prints on museum-grade paper, as well as high-resolution screen-based works designed for contemporary digital displays. Each piece is offered in multiple sizes to accommodate collectors who prefer intimate formats or large-scale installations. These editions reflect the suspended quality of the series itself — immersive, quiet, and made to resonate across different viewing environments.

Additional information about formats, printing options, and edition details can be found on the dedicated page for Unique Editions.