Kevin Lucbert – maezen

Before we get into your work, can you just tell us a little bit about yourself?

I was born in Paris, France. I studied graphic design and illustration at the École des Arts Décoratifs in Paris until 2008. In 2006, I did a one-year Erasmus exchange at the Kunsthochschule Berlin-Weissensee. It was an amazing year. In 2012, I moved to Berlin, which had always attracted me. Living in Paris seemed very difficult for a young artist. In Berlin, I was able to quickly find a place to live and a studio where I could continue my personal work. Today, my two daughters, aged 4 and 7, were born here. Authentic Berliners who represent an interesting mix of French and German cultures.

We are curious about your past and your style. When did you get started with art, what are your preferred topics and how would you describe your style?

My parents, as enthusiasts, always had a wonderful collection of classic Franco-Belgian comic books—Tintin, etc. As a child, I started by reading and rereading them countless times until I almost knew them by heart. From there, I discovered other, more alternative, more adult comics, graphic novels that were more experimental, introspective, and radical (Moebius, Hugo Pratt, Jodorowsky, Crumb...). So, I began my journey in art by creating my own comics, drawing my own stories. I feel like I've always been drawing since I was a kid. It's a natural way for me to express myself. As a child, I would depict my family's life in cartoons, which greatly amused my father. In school, during class, I would fill the margins of my notebooks with little characters and scenes of my own invention, using a ballpoint pen.

My favorite subjects are dreams, the unconscious, water, and mythologies. Our ability to dream, to invent other worlds, in contrast to a "modern" universe. Nature and its chaos confront a world made of grids, straight lines, roads, and buildings with orthogonal lines. I also enjoy creating portraits and inventing stories. Each drawing is an opportunity for me to create a small world, a scenario, or an encounter. I always wonder what will emerge from the pen.

My style is figurative and narrative, tending towards abstraction and the simplification of lines. I mainly draw with a ballpoint pen, which allows me to create different textures and lines. This ranges from pure, straight lines drawn with a ruler to very dense crosshatches that generate darkness and depth.

To be part of our project, we asked each artist to address certain topics in their designs that we should all think about more often. Can you briefly explain what your designs are about and what message you want to convey with your designs for maezen.

The series I drew for maezen is titled "Homes." It is a graphic exploration of the concept of home—its meaning, its purpose, its contradictions... What is a home? Do we all share the same idea of one? What kind of home do we want to live in? As a French expatriate in Germany, these questions have haunted me for a long time. I tried to answer them in each of my images.

- Garden of delights: This drawing was inspired by Jérome Bosch's painting “The Garden of Earthly Delights”. A strange flora gives birth and shelter to numerous women and men. We come from the earth and will one day return to it, in order to create new plants and beings, in an almost infinite cycle. Teeming with life, the ground we walk on is sacred. If one day we achieve a sufficient degree of spiritual awakening, we'll be in peaceful symbiosis with Nature.
- Sisyphus : In Greek mythology, Sisyphus is known for his punishment of pushing a boulder to the top of a mountain, only for it to always roll back down. In this drawing, the rock has become a house, and Sisyphus has multiplied! His punishment is no longer just his own but that of all mankind. Building a home, undertaking a project, creating a family, and then nurturing it, pushing it up a steep hill, reminds me of Sisyphus and his boulder. Sometimes you stumble, fall, and slide backward. Sometimes everything comes tumbling down and crashes to the bottom. Then you have to start all over again, inch by inch, up the slope from the darkness of the depths to the light at the summit.
- Homes sweet Homes: Where to live? Where is home? Is it an apartment in a building? Or a house of your own? In big cities, single-family homes are sometimes squeezed between two enormous buildings. By their very existence, they resist the all-conquering urban empire.
- The silver cord: Two human figures face each other. A thread emerges from each of their open mouths, converging into a swirling maelstrom at the center. In the midst of this tumultuous whirl of desires, conflicting aspirations, shared passions, and dialogues, the fragile shape of a small shared house takes form. The 'silver cord' has various definitions—religious, mystical... It is a connection between the physical body and the spirit. For me, it is a magical link as well as an initiatory path of life. It's similar to the yellow brick road in 'The Wizard of Oz'. In this drawing, the silver cord connects two beings who meet, and together, through their interactions, something resembling a home—whether physical or spiritual—emerges.
- House of plenty: A house gives birth to other houses, which in turn give birth to further extensions of houses, and so on... The house is perceived as a cornucopia, reproducing itself in time and space, like a Tree of Life. For me, the house is a living organism that grows, evolves, buds, disappears, or multiplies. In my drawings, I enjoy using the very simple and 'modern' outline of the individual house in strange contexts. Here, it is in symbiosis and synergy with a living plant organism that inhabits it and allows it to bear fruit.

Last question, is there one thing which is important to you that you would like to share with our community?

I would simply like to share with as many people as possible the joy of drawing and creation. It has always been a great source of happiness and well-being for me. It's also a refuge during difficult times. Art is an incredible, alchemical process that transforms and elevates negative and sad emotions into positive creations. Art will always be there to help me dream and express the possibility of another world. For that, all it takes is a simple ballpoint pen and a piece of paper.


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