Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Breaking Down 3D-X: Constructing the Canvas

 Breaking Down 3D-X: Constructing the Canvas

1. The Blueprint

There is a specific frequency to my studio when I am deep in the work. It isn't the quiet, delicate environment people often associate with fine art. The defining sound is the sharp, sweeping scrape of steel against a taught surface-a palette knife carving through thick, heavy layers of pigment. It is the sound of construction.



When people look at my canvases, they immediately react to the raw, unyielding emotion. They see the psychological intensity, the vibrant colors, and the animalistic chaos. What they don't always realize is that behind that visceral energy stands a mechanical engineer. Before the chaos takes over, there has to be a rigid structure. For me, that structure begins with the lens. Photography isn't just a casual reference; it is my initial schematic. It provides the exact coordinates of light, shadow, and anatomy that I need to anchor the piece before the physical building even begins.

2. The Architecture of Paint

To understand my 3D-X technique, you have to stop looking at a canvas as a flat, two-dimensional plane and start treating it as a foundation. Once the photographic schematic is locked in my mind, the engineering takes over.



3D-X is, at its core, a method of architectural layering. I don't just paint a figure; I construct it. Using heavy, bold applications of medium and pigment, I build the forms outward. It requires a deep, tactile understanding of material weight, tension, and balance-much like calculating the load-bearing capacity of a physical structure. I use palette knives to physically stack the paint, manipulating the medium so that it holds its own weight and begins to rise off the surface.

3. Structuring Chaos

Once the layering begins, the real battle starts on the canvas. It is a constant, deliberate push and pull between the precise, load-bearing architecture of the paint and the vibrant, explosive energy of the brushstrokes.



My work is heavily driven by the unflinching, fleshy realism of Lucien Freud colliding with the sheer, psychological distortion of Francis Bacon-but all fused through a modern Lebanese sensibility. The rigid engineering of the 3D-X technique isn't meant to trap that intense emotion; it is meant to support its sheer weight. The thick, meticulously sculpted layers give the psychological depth a physical body, allowing the raw emotion to literally stand up on the canvas.

4. The Final Form

When a piece is finished, it shouldn't just sit politely on a gallery wall. It should confront you. By building these dynamic figures outward, bridging the gap between a traditional painting and a physical sculpture, the subject refuses to stay confined to the background.



They aggressively push into the room. They occupy your physical space. The canvas is just the ground floor. The 3D-X technique is how I build upward, proving that mechanical discipline and raw artistic chaos don't just coexist-they demand each other.

Jad Zeitouni

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Sunday, April 20, 2025

Beyond Likeness: Capturing Connection in Layers

 Beyond Likeness: Capturing Connection in Layers

"Levitating" by Jad Zeitouni

Portrait Painting by Jad Zeitouni Artist Abstract contemporary art realism


Every commission is a unique journey, a collaborative dance between artist and subject. But when a client approaches with an open mind, trusting the artist's vision implicitly, the possibilities truly unfurl. This painting is the result of such a journey, a portrait born not just from observation, but from connection.



When I met the subject of this painting ''Nabil'', I knew I wanted to delve deeper than a mere likeness. Inspired by the raw emotional power of artists like Francis Bacon and Lucien Freud, I believe that a true portrait captures the inner world as much as the outer. With his gracious willingness to explore this, I chose to spend time getting to know him, allowing his personality and energy to guide my artistic process.

This led me to take my own reference images, not just as visual aids, but as a way to absorb the atmosphere and nuances of his space and presence. The colors that emerged during this phase were particularly compelling. For me, color holds a profound psychological depth, a language of emotion that speaks volumes before a single form is fully realized. The palette for this painting began to build organically, reflecting the warmth and complexity I perceived.



And then there was his cat. With a character all her own, she was an undeniable part of his world and quickly became an integral element of the composition. Capturing the dynamic between them, the quiet companionship and individual spirits, became as important as rendering their forms.


Using my signature approach of vibrant colors, bold brushstrokes, and the layered technique I call 3D-X, I aimed to sculpt their figures from the canvas, giving them a sense of presence and vitality. The goal was to create a painting that resonates with the same emotional intensity that I felt while connecting with my subject and his fascinating feline companion.



This painting is more than just a portrait; it's a narrative woven in color and texture, a glimpse into a shared moment of quietude and connection. It's a testament to the power of approaching art with an open heart and mind, allowing the story to unfold organically on the canvas.

To commission an artwork please feel free to contact me on my email : info@jadzeitouni.com

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Breaking Down 3D-X: Constructing the Canvas

  Breaking Down 3D-X: Constructing the Canvas 1. The Blueprint There is a specific frequency to my studio when I am deep in the work. It isn...