There are artists who paint. And there are artists who reveal. Jean-Luc Curabet unmistakably belongs to the latter: those visual creators who shift boundaries—not through provocation, but through lucidity. Through a commitment to a worldview that rejects easy oblivion, decorative emptiness, or comfortable imagery. Born in Moselle and proudly self-taught, Curabet has been developing for more than ten years a striking, dense, instantly recognizable body of work—standing at the crossroads of pop-surrealism, altered memory, and reassembled humanity.
His raw material? Old photographs. Not iconic ones, but forgotten faces—silent portraits frozen in time. From these visual relics, he builds an intense plastic language: digital printing, collage, painting, symbolic additions, narrative fragments. Each artwork becomes a field of tension between figuration and deconstruction, between past and transformation. What he seeks to reveal? What remains beneath the image. What resists behind the smile or the frame. A shard of soul, a scar, a reinvented memory.
