Digital Fragments 419 by Denis Leclerc – completed abstract digital artwork from the Ethereal Solid series.

Digital Fragments 419

Digital Fragments 419 – Ethereal Solid

Digital Fragments 419 is part of the Ethereal Solid digital art series by Denis Leclerc. Like all works in this collection, it explores abstraction as a space of tension and openness. Here, the image revolves around a striking visual axis: a sinuous, almost spinal column that anchors the entire composition.

At first glance, Digital Fragments 419 appears airy and open. Large areas of muted space surround a dense concentration of form in the upper right corner. There, ribbon-like shapes intertwine and fold inward. Yet, this column does not dominate—it breathes, allowing the surrounding emptiness to resonate.

Curious about the creative process?

If so, visit the Œuvre en chantier page to discover how Digital Fragments 419 took shape — from early gestures to its final form. (The content is in French, the artist’s native language.)

Digital Fragments 419 and the Dynamic Column

One of the defining features of this Ethereal Solid digital artwork is the presence of a sinuous vertical line—a dynamic column of intertwined forms. This axis emerged naturally during the creative process, gradually guiding the composition.

Rather than imposing symmetry or balance, the column creates a dialogue between density and space. As a result, it draws the viewer’s gaze upward and inward. In doing so, it invites a deeper exploration of rhythm and movement within the image. Moreover, the surrounding void plays an essential role—offering room for the eye to wander, rest, and return.

Gesture, Tension, and Technique

Like all works in the Ethereal Solid series, Digital Fragments 419 was built using high-resolution digital tools. The artist layered each form on iPad, allowing the gestures to evolve over time. Consequently, the result balances controlled tension with open, breathing space—gesture and stillness, structure and release.

Every texture and line serves a purpose. In fact, the piece offers a meditation on how form can emerge from fluid motion, and how abstraction can suggest presence without imposing narrative.

Digital Fragments 419 — Limited Edition Formats

This artwork is available in three limited editions. It is part of the Unique Editions collection. Each print uses high-resolution Giclée technology on museum-grade Hahnemühle paper. Furthermore, the prints are created at Toronto Image Works, ensuring the highest standards of quality and detail. Every edition includes a 1” white border and is signed by hand.

  • Miniature Marvel – 12 × 15.0 in – 504 $
  • Grand Gesture – 24 × 30.01 in – 1024 $
  • Monumental Piece – 36 × 45.01 in – 1924 $

In the end, each work in the Ethereal Solid series stands on its own. While they share a visual language, each one tells a different story. Ultimately, Digital Fragments 419 offers a quiet meditation on structure—how a single line can hold space and invite contemplation.

Deux formes abstraites aux textures striées flottent sur fond blanc. Image préliminaire de l’œuvre numérique Digital Fragments 418 par Denis Leclerc, illustrant une étape initiale du processus de création.

Oeuvre en chantier 1

Œuvre en chantier – Digital Fragments 418

Quand je commence un tableau, je ne sais pas où je vais. Et c’est volontaire. Je ne pars pas d’une idée, ni d’une structure. À la place, Je commence par unepalette de couleurs, souvent déclenchée par un motif ou un objet d’art — un tableau, une sculpture, un fragment de textile, une installation — que j’ai glané au fil du temps. Très souvent, c’est au cours de  mes visites de galeries, de musées, d’expositions ou de foires d’art contemporain, ici comme à l’étranger.

Ce n’est pas tant l’objet lui-même qui m’intéresse, mais plutôt ce qu’il évoque : une ambiance, une vibration, un souvenir de surface.

Puis vient un geste. Libre. Souvent injustifié.

Je l’observe. J’essaie alors de comprendre ce qu’il appelle, ce qu’il refuse. Et peu à peu,  je continue à poser des formes, des textures, parfois à les effacer. Je ne cherche pas à faire apparaître quelque chose — je veux voir ce qui ressort. Ce qui insiste.

Ce n’est pas de l’improvisation. C’est une écoute.

Tu ne peins pas pour construire,
tu peins pour révéler les lignes de fuite.
Ce n’est pas le motif qui guide.
C’est la blessure qu’il ouvre, et la lumière qui s’y engouffre.

Ego Klar

Ce que l’image me révèle

Quand l’œuvre semble terminée, je prends du recul.
J’essaie de comprendre à quoi elle me fait penser. Pas ce que j’ai voulu faire — mais ce qu’elle m’impose maintenant qu’elle est là.

Dans le cas de Digital Fragments 418, ce sont les lignes transversales, les zones de rupture, les blocs hachés qui m’ont interpellé. Une sensation étrange, presque militaire. Et soudain, une image : le camouflage Dazzle des navires de la Première Guerre mondiale.

Des peintres, nombreux, ont été enrôlés à cette époque. Et beaucoup ont été affectés à la conception de ces motifs. Ce n’était pas une simple dissimulation : le but n’était pas de rendre le navire invisible, mais de troubler la perception. D’empêcher l’ennemi d’en deviner la direction, la vitesse, la nature.

Et si mon travail procédait de la même logique ? Ne pas cacher, mais dérouter. Déformer pour préserver un certain mystère. Rendre le regard incertain, et dans cette incertitude, créer un espace d’écoute.

Ce n’est pas une ruse, c’est un masque.
Le fragment se peint pour ne pas se laisser prendre d’un seul coup.
Il veut flotter dans l’œil, comme un navire rayé dans le brouillard.

Ego Klar

Voir l’œuvre complétée : Digital Fragments 418

Digital Fragments 418 from the Ethereal Solid series by Denis Leclerc, showing a complex, stacked abstract form with striped textures reminiscent of dazzle camouflage, in muted beige and grey tones.

Digital Fragments 418

Digital Fragments 418

Ethereal Solid

Digital Fragments 418 is part of the Ethereal Solid digital art series by Denis Leclerc. Like all works in this collection, it explores abstraction as a porous space. Light, form, and rhythm dissolve into each other. However, this piece feels different. It stands out with its dense textures and layered tension.

At first glance, the shapes look like rock, fabric, or even folded metal. But when you look closer, the image becomes harder to define. It feels layered, as if time had folded in on itself. As a result, Digital Fragments 418 shows a moment of pressure. Everything leans inward—yet nothing breaks.

Curious about the creative process behind this piece?

Visit the Œuvre en chantier page to discover how Digital Fragments 418 took shape — from early experiments to its final form. (The content is in French, the artist’s native language.)

Digital Fragments 418 and the Influence of Dazzle Camouflage

One of the most distinctive features of this Ethereal Solid Digital Artwork lies in the striped patterns running across the surface. These lines echo dazzle camouflage, a pattern used on warships during World War I. Instead of hiding ships, it confused the eye—making them harder to target.

In the same way, Digital Fragments 418 uses visual misdirection. It pulls the viewer in, then breaks their focus. Rather than offering a single focal point, the image creates shifting zones of rhythm and contrast. Like a dazzle ship, it turns distraction into a kind of strength.

Consequently, this mix of order and ambiguity defines the Ethereal Solid series. Leclerc builds each piece with clarity and care. Although the forms feel unpredictable, each line serves a purpose. Every texture plays a role in the emotional balance of the work.

Furthermore, the artist used high-resolution digital tools. He built the layers on iPad, working over time. Therefore, the result balances movement and structure—gesture and memory, all at once.

Available Formats

This artwork is available in three limited editions. It is part of the Unique Editions collection. All prints use Giclée technology on museum-grade Hahnemühle paper. Each edition includes a 1″ white border and is signed by hand.

  • Miniature Marvel – 12 × 15.0 in – 504 $
  • Grand Gesture – 24 × 30.01 in – 1024 $
  • Monumental Piece – 36 × 45.01 in – 1924 $

In the end, each work in the Ethereal Solid series stands on its own. While they share a visual language, each one tells a different story. Digital Fragments 418 offers a quiet meditation on confusion—and how it can lead to clarity.

Framed digital artwork titled Digital Fragments 417 by Denis Leclerc. Abstract tubular forms in layered gray and ivory tones, slightly blurred and textured, emerging from a pale background with a soft gradient. Part of the Ethereal Solid series.

Digital Fragments 417

Digital Fragments 417

Explore a New Palette

Digital Fragments 417 is part of the Ethereal Solid series by Denis Leclerc. It introduces a new direction in the collection. Earlier pieces used warm tones. They often resembled light, skin, or sand. In contrast, this work shifts to a grayscale palette built around charcoal, slate, and silver. As a result, it brings a colder atmosphere—but one filled with depth and quiet tension.

Why Gray Matters

This new color choice is deliberate. While many see gray as neutral or dull, it actually carries emotional weight. It feels quiet, yet expressive. In this piece, gray becomes a space for contrast and reflection. Moreover, it softens edges and reveals subtle shifts in tone. Because of this, the image invites slower looking. Without bold colors, forms emerge more gently—yet with greater clarity.

Abstract Form with Realistic Intent

Although the shapes appear abstract, they hold a sense of realism. The curves suggest folds of cloth or muscle. The whole composition feels like it could collapse—yet it stays intact. This fragile tension is key to the work. As a result, it offers an inner structure that seems to breathe. Compared to chaos, there’s a sense of balance. It’s unstable, yes, but still grounded.

Light, Tension, and Composition

What sets this work apart is how it interacts with light. Gradients shift softly across the surface. At the same time, translucent layers overlap and blend. Shadow and form blur together in a quiet rhythm. As a result, motion appears inside stillness. The image feels like it might unfold or fade. This visual language speaks to the core idea of the Ethereal Solid series: form that holds itself together, just barely.

Edition Details

Digital Fragments 417 was created digitally at high resolution (6552 × 8192 px at 300 dpi). Thanks to this format, the artwork supports large-scale printing without losing detail. Each edition is printed on Hahnemühle Photo Rag using archival Giclée technology. You can also find it through the Unique Editions collection.

Prints are produced by Toronto Image Works, a fine art lab based in Toronto. They also specialize in high-end Giclée printing and ensure the image preserves its original tone and softness.

  • Miniature Marvel (12” × 15.0”) — $504
  • Grand Gesture (24” × 30.01”) — $1024
  • Monumental Piece (36” × 45.01”) — $1924

Each print includes a 1-inch matte white border, the artist’s signature, and a certificate of authenticity.

Artwork Details

  • Title: Digital Fragments 417
  • Series: Ethereal Solid
  • Medium: Digital painting + animation
  • Print: Hahnemühle Photo Rag
  • Created: May 2025
  • Artist: Denis Leclerc

Continuing the Conversation

In essence, this work continues a key thread in my practice—giving shape to what cannot be touched. Digital Fragments 417 is quiet, yet never passive. Its tones are muted, but its structure holds meaning. It connects to earlier works. At the same time, it opens a more internal, intimate voice. It’s just one fragment, yes—but it expands the story I’ve been telling all along.

Digital abstract artwork featuring smooth sculptural shapes in golden, bronze, and cream tones. The composition suggests the partial emergence of a human form, blending softness, weight, and motion within a vertical format.

Digital Fragments 416

Digital Fragments 416

What is Digital Fragments 416?

Digital Fragments 416 is part of Denis Leclerc’s series Ethereal Solid. He created it in May 2025. This work marks a shift in his digital practice. He no longer dissolves reality into abstraction. Instead, he gives abstraction a form. It feels present and weighty.

This piece exists in two forms. One is a printed version. The other is a subtle animation. Each version lets the image breathe. Together, they reveal form, gesture, and emotion. As a result, the viewer sees something abstract yet grounded.

How Digital Fragments 416 Translates Gesture into Shape

The composition shows smooth curves in warm bronze, copper, and cream. These shapes suggest a human presence—a face, a shoulder, a gesture. Nothing is fully defined. The form stays in motion. It hovers between memory and matter.

Leclerc does not break the image apart. Instead, he lets the form hold. He utilizes the digital medium to bring something to light. He asks the viewer to think. What if emotion could take shape? Consequently, the viewer enters a space where presence and ambiguity coexist.

The Animated Layer of Digital Fragments 416

Light glides across the surface. Shapes stretch and fold. Movement is minimal but powerful. As a result, the image feels alive. It gently evolves.

The animation avoids narrative. It explains nothing. Instead, it invites the viewer to watch. A form emerges slowly. Even though the motion is subtle, its presence is strong. Ultimately, it turns stillness into rhythm. Therefore, the work offers a meditative experience.

Material Qualities of Digital Fragments 416 (Print Version)

Leclerc printed this work on Hahnemühle metallic paper. The work exists in three formats (See Below). The tall format adds tension. Even so, the metallic surface reflects light softly. It builds depth, even when nothing moves.

The print asserts its presence. Although the work is digital, it feels intimate and grounded. Its stillness gives it quiet strength. The metallic surface adds texture and warmth, making the image feel almost touchable. As a result, the piece engages the eye—and stirs the senses.

Discover more about Denis Leclerc’s portfolio to see how materials play a central role in his digital practice.

From Fragmentation to Presence: A New Direction

The Ethereal Solid series rethinks abstraction. It no longer escapes form. Instead, it returns to presence.

Past works broke form apart. This series holds it together. Digital Fragments 416 is one of many pieces where the abstract becomes visible. In this way, it affirms a new path. As such, it leads to future works. They may grow with more clarity. Moreover, this shift opens new ways to express digital feeling. Meanwhile, it keeps form in motion. It never stays static. It is always becoming.

Artwork Details

  • Title: Digital Fragments 416
  • Series: Ethereal Solid
  • Medium: Digital painting + animation
  • Print: Hahnemühle metallic paper
  • Created: May 2025
  • Artist: Denis Leclerc

Order Your Limited Edition Print

Bring Digital Fragments 407 into your space. This artwork is in three sizes and printed on premium Hahnemühle Photo Rag paper for exceptional depth and vibrancy.

  • Miniature Marvel (12” × 15”) — $504
  • Grand Gesture (24” × 30″) — $1024
  • Monumental Piece (36” × 45”) — $1924
Framed fine art print of Digital Fragments 416 by Denis Leclerc on Hahnemühle metallic paper, displayed on a white surface with visible signature.
Fine art print of Digital Fragments 416 by Denis Leclerc, produced on archival Hahnemühle metallic paper.
Digital Fragments 412 by Denis Leclerc – abstract digital artwork resembling a distorted sculptural form in warm flesh tones

Digital Fragments 412

Digital Fragments 412 – From the Ethereal Solid Series

Overview

Digital Fragments 412 is a digital artwork by Denis Leclerc. It is part of the ongoing Ethereal Solid series. This piece explores the shift from abstraction to something that feels more physical. It blends soft, sculptural shapes with digital energy. The image invites both visual attention and emotional reflection.

Instead of fading into pure abstraction, this piece gives shape to what feels invisible. It marks a new phase in Leclerc’s artistic path. As he moves forward, he works to reclaim form, texture, and presence through digital media. The Ethereal Solid series suggests that digital gestures can carry memory, emotion, and even a trace of the body. As a result, the series joins stillness with depth and abstraction with weight.

Visual Composition in Digital Fragments 412

Digital Fragments 412 is one of the most vivid pieces in the series. The artwork brings together smooth, muscular shapes. These curves hint at limbs, torsos, or folds. Pressed together, they suggest tension, closeness, or comfort. Furthermore, warm tones like copper, rose, and ochre add to this impression of a body.

Yet nothing in the image is clear-cut. The forms avoid easy meaning. They show emotion without a face. They suggest touch without skin. This gives the piece both mystery and softness. In addition, the image also has visual weight. Each shape feels heavy, but soft. As light moves across the surface, the illusion of skin or fabric begins to form. The result is a surface that feels nearly alive. It is not a human figure, but it feels close to one.

Why Collect Digital Fragments 412?

You may be drawn to its quiet beauty or its emotional pull. Digital Fragments 412 is more than just a digital image. It brings presence into your space. It is calm, sculptural, and full of life. At the same time, it stays open to your interpretation. As a result, it speaks to every viewer in a different way. If you love art that is abstract but still intimate, this piece may stay with you. Therefore, choosing Digital Fragments 412 means choosing a work that connects the digital and the human.

Available Formats for Digital Fragments 412

This artwork is printed on Hahnemühle metallic paper. It comes in three sizes:

  • Miniature Marvel: 12 × 15.0 inches
  • Grand Gesture: 24 × 30.01 inches
  • Monumental Piece: 36 × 45.01 inches

Each size keeps the tall shape and light quality of the Ethereal Solid series. Because the original file is large—6552 × 8192 pixels at 300 dpi—it offers sharp detail even at full scale. Moreover, the paper’s reflective surface enhances the sense of depth and motion in every print.

Learn more about how each piece is printed and certified on the Unique Editions page.

Artwork Specifications for Digital Fragments 412

  • Title: Digital Fragments 412
  • Series: Ethereal Solid
  • Artist: Denis Leclerc
  • Medium: Digital painting + subtle animation
  • Support: Hahnemühle metallic paper
  • Sizes: 12 × 15.0 in, 24 × 30.01 in, 36 × 45.01 in
  • Created: May 2025

Context: Ethereal Solid

The Ethereal Solid series comes from Leclerc’s wish to make abstract art more real. Earlier pieces in the Digital Fragments series focused on breaking things apart. However, this new work asks a different question. What if abstraction could feel solid? What if softness had shape? What can digital art show us, instead of hiding?

These pieces do not show people. Still, they feel like they have a body. The viewer may see a shoulder, a breath, or a slow movement. Moreover, the shimmer and curved lines create quiet presence. The work feels soft, but it stays grounded. Ultimately, the Ethereal Solid series opens a new path. It brings digital art closer to something we can feel, not just see.

Order Your Limited Edition Print

Bring Digital Fragments 412 into your space. This artwork is in three sizes and printed on premium Hahnemühle Photo Rag paper for exceptional depth and vibrancy.

  • Miniature Marvel (12” × 15”) — $504
  • Grand Gesture (24” × 30″) — $1024
  • Monumental Piece (36” × 45”) — $1924