Rupa has evolved her art, which she defines as spiritual, through her own spiritual and magical practice. Rupa, meaning programmable living matter, first appeared in the ancient Egyptian civilization, hidden within the symbol of the number 7, evolving from an unconventional alchemical and mystical gravitational center into a vibrant and lively substance, yet to take a definitive form, embodying the essence and ‘complexity’ of the time elapsed.
In both her oil paintings and digital works, Rupa employs the technique known as “Mystery” (Rupa Art). These are manifestations that take on identities through the vital experiences and consciousness possessed by both the space it occupies and its audience, expressed through fluid drawings, colors, and deformations that can shape-shift and transform.
The artist, who seeks to experience and convey the experiment and experiences of the collective unconscious connection, aims to strike a balance between the philosophical thinking styles of both Aristotle and Bacon. Embarking on contemplation in moments without sharp and rigid distinctions between deductive and inductive reasoning within the flow, this entails accepting that contemplation in moments will unite common emotions into a single backbone…
Through the different tones and narrative styles she brings forth in her work, she also bridges the debts and agreements that need to be remembered with the emotions she makes visible.