Wilbert Tiongson

Joined Artfinder: May 2025

Artworks for sale: 5

United Kingdom

About Wilbert Tiongson

 
 
  • Biography

    Realism paints the face, Abstraction paints the journey.

    Realism paints the face — the visible character, the contours of the moment, what the eye perceives and the mind quickly categorizes. It is grounded in the now, in the tangible, in the external. It captures expressions, postures, light falling across skin — a snapshot of presence, a reflection of the world as it appears. It tells us who someone seems to be, or what something looks like, with precision and fidelity to form.

    Abstraction, on the other hand, paints the journey — the invisible threads that run beneath the surface, the quiet echoes of memory, emotion, and subconscious thought. It is less about what is seen and more about what is felt. In abstraction, we find the ineffable: the weight of a moment that can’t be named, the accumulated essence of experiences too vast or nuanced for literal depiction. It speaks in symbols, colors, textures, and movement — evoking rather than explaining.

    Where realism captures the individual in a single breath, abstraction captures the soul across a lifetime. One renders the outer world; the other maps the inner landscape. Together, they remind us that who we are is not only how we appear, but the stories we carry — stories etched not on the face, but in the spirit.

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Biography

Realism paints the face, Abstraction paints the journey.

Realism paints the face — the visible character, the contours of the moment, what the eye perceives and the mind quickly categorizes. It is grounded in the now, in the tangible, in the external. It captures expressions, postures, light falling across skin — a snapshot of presence, a reflection of the world as it appears. It tells us who someone seems to be, or what something looks like, with precision and fidelity to form.

Abstraction, on the other hand, paints the journey — the invisible threads that run beneath the surface, the quiet echoes of memory, emotion, and subconscious thought. It is less about what is seen and more about what is felt. In abstraction, we find the ineffable: the weight of a moment that can’t be named, the accumulated essence of experiences too vast or nuanced for literal depiction. It speaks in symbols, colors, textures, and movement — evoking rather than explaining.

Where realism captures the individual in a single breath, abstraction captures the soul across a lifetime. One renders the outer world; the other maps the inner landscape. Together, they remind us that who we are is not only how we appear, but the stories we carry — stories etched not on the face, but in the spirit.