"My philosophy is to show others, in everyday objects, the most ordinary, the closest to man, a little joy, a little magic, a little beauty."
To bring out the beauty of everyday objects that familiarity has gradually rendered invisible. This is the ambition of the Greek painter and sculptor Dionyssopoulos Pavlos. His quasi-organic forms draw the viewer's attention to the relationship they have with everyday objects. His focus on these can be linked to an influence of American Pop Art on his career, which he explains in particular by works questioning the uniqueness of the work of art in a context of increasingly technical reproducibility.