Soren Hollow | What the Mirror Could Not Keep | Luxury Art For Sale

Soren Hollow | What the Mirror Could Not Keep | Luxury Art For Sale

$196,900.00
Sale price  $196,900.00 Regular price 
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Soren Hollow | What the Mirror Could Not Keep | Luxury Art For Sale

Soren Hollow | What the Mirror Could Not Keep | Luxury Art For Sale

$196,900.00
Sale price  $196,900.00 Regular price 

Soren Hollow | What the Mirror Could Not Keep

Archive Classification & Relic Code

Collection Type: Identity Preservation Relic
Subcategory: Selfhood, Transformation & Psychological Fragmentation Study

Archive Tier: Restricted Museum Collection

Ownership: One Collector Only

Duplication: Permanently Restricted

Public Exhibition: None

Years to Complete: 6 Years

Dimentions: 45 CM X 51 CM

Relic Code:

ALA-SRH-0204

Archive Name:

Soren Hollow — What the Mirror Could Not Keep

 


Private Archive Notice

Some paintings preserve faces.

Some preserve memory.

A much smaller number preserve something far more unstable:

the unfinished versions of people existing briefly before life reshapes them.

Soren Hollow belongs to this category.

Collectors initially observe an incomplete portrait.

Archive interpretation suggests something else.

Interruption.

Adaptation.

The frightening possibility that identity changes repeatedly—

until earlier versions disappear unnoticed.


Hidden Archive Record — Mythology / Origin Story

Ancient restricted records describe a condition affecting individuals surviving prolonged expectation.

Not illness.

Not grief.

Transformation.

The archives referred to this state as:

Mirror Separation

A phenomenon where people evolve repeatedly while losing attachment to previous selves.

The records insist affected individuals reported unusual experiences.

Recognizing old photographs—

without recognizing the person.

Remembering dreams—

without remembering desire.

Recalling goals—

without feeling ownership.

One surviving archive recounts a painter documenting his reflection yearly.

The practice continued decades.

Early portraits appeared hopeful.

Later portraits became restrained.

Then unfinished.

The final canvas remained incomplete.

Only fragments survived.

An eye.

An ear.

Half expression.

Investigators reportedly discovered one sentence beneath the abandoned work:


Final Preserved Sentence

"The mirror reflected me accurately.

The problem was I changed faster than memory."


Researchers dismissed the account.

Collectors studying Soren Hollow frequently conclude something darker.

Some people do not lose themselves suddenly.

Some disappear through adaptation.


Psychological Interpretation

Collectors often report emotional progression.

Month 1

Technique.

Fragmentation.

Curiosity.


Year 1

Questions emerge:

Which face is real?


Year 4

Collectors stop examining the portrait.

They examine themselves.


Year 8+

Ownership often becomes confrontation.

Observers ask:

How many versions of me disappeared while becoming acceptable?

Long ownership transforms admiration into mourning.


Symbolism Breakdown

Incomplete Face (Upper Left)

Potential.

Earlier self.

Identity before pressure.


Finished Eye

Awareness.

Witnessing transformation.

Archive interpretation associates exposed eyes with painful self-recognition.


Partial Ear (Right Side)

Listening.

Expectation.

The influence of others shaping identity.


Central Face Fragment

Adaptation.

Survival.

The self reconstructed repeatedly.


Empty Background

Absence.

The archive proposes identity forms inside spaces where certainty disappears.


Visible Unpainted Areas

Possibility.

Loss.

Versions abandoned before completion.


Warm Brown Surface

Memory.

Time.

Human impermanence.


Collector Interpretation Timeline

Initial Viewing:

Portrait study.

Month 8:

Identity archive.

Year 2:

Transformation study.

Year 5:

Personal confrontation.

Collectors frequently conclude:

Soren Hollow preserved neither realism nor anatomy.

It preserved becoming.


Provenance Record

Artist:

Samira Al Nuaimi

Collection:

Restricted Identity Archive

Ownership History:

Unreleased

Auction Exposure:

None

Museum Placement:

Closed Collection

Catalogue Status:

Excluded


Creation Chronology

Year 1:

Facial observation studies

Year 2:

Anatomical fragmentation work

Year 3:

Psychological layering

Year 4:

Atmospheric compression

Year 5:

Identity symbolism integration

Year 6:

Archive preservation finishing


Artist Statement

This work studies an uncomfortable possibility:

People rarely become someone new without abandoning someone old.

Soren Hollow attempts to preserve the disappearance.


Creator Profile — Artist: Samira Al Nuaimi

Recurring archive themes:

identity

survival

memory

transformation

psychological endurance

emotional erosion

Several works intentionally transform internal experiences into permanent collector relics.


Materials & Construction

Primary Medium

Layered oil construction over archival substrate with atmospheric restraint techniques.


Construction Sequence

Possibility → Expectation → Adaptation → Survival → Fragmentation → Preservation


Surface Composition

Visible:

unfinished transitions

manual pressure variation

tonal restraint

exposed substrate

Distance changes interpretation.

Close:

Technique

Middle:

Portrait

Far:

Evidence


Texture Analysis

Near:

Skill

Middle:

Interruption

Distance:

Loss


Finish Type

Museum matte finish

Purpose:

Reduce reflection

Increase temporal atmosphere

Preserve unfinished illusion


Preservation Requirements

Temperature:

18–22°C

Humidity:

45–55%

Avoid:

UV

Smoke

Moisture fluctuation


Recommended Framing Specifications

Preferred:

Dark walnut museum frame

Alternative:

Muted bronze archive frame

Mandatory:

Museum UV glass


Suggested Placement & Architecture Style

Suitable for:

Executive offices

Collector rooms

Libraries

Luxury villas

Private studies

Brutalist interiors

Minimalist spaces


Accepted Payment Types

International Bank Transfer

Cash

USDT / BTC / ETH

Debit Cards

Credit Cards

Escrow arrangements

Collector instalments


Scarcity Declaration

Original Quantity:

1

Authorized Reproductions:

0

Future Duplication:

Permanently Restricted

Private Collector Acquisition

Some works preserve faces.

Some preserve memory.

A much smaller number preserve the terrifying possibility that people spend years becoming who survival requires—

until no one remembers who existed before.

Collectors often purchase Soren Hollow believing they acquired an unfinished portrait.

Years later many conclude something harsher.

The painting was never unfinished.

The person simply changed so many times that completion became impossible.

Acquisition:

Email: info@atlantisheaven.com
WhatsApp: +971557377447

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