





Fascinating Connection Between Portrait and Culinary Art
The image "Soya" by Enora Lalet impressively showcases the fusion of human form and culinary textures. In gentle beige tones, the black-accented background stands out, creating a calm yet tension-filled contrast. The composition invites the viewer to explore the connection between food and identity while the artistic representation stimulates the senses. This piece could look great in a modern kitchen or a creative dining area, sparking an engaging dialogue about our eating habits.
Inspiring Art for Creative Spaces
This image is also available in various formats. Whether as an elegant print on acrylic glass or a fine art print, it offers multiple ways to give your space a special touch.
If you are unsure about the product selection, we are happy to provide personal advice.
Country: France
Artist's description:
Mix medias, food materials, ASIA series, 2009.
In 2008, for the first time, Enora Lalet created the concept of cooked portraits, the beginning of the Cooking Faces series. These photographs present the human body and culinary textures in an unlikely relationship involving supports and materials. Covered in body paint, the faces are dehumanized, adorned with food reversals, in a pop and garish aesthetic. It’s a work in which texture rules and conjures the senses in an unusual confrontation around the meal customs.
“Pop icons, glorifying food and earth, the question could be: are we what we eat? Her off-the-chain portraits, flesh and sauce, lips and coulis, colour and optical brilliance, exquisite pheromones, are ad libitum variations which ensnare and chain the senses.” O.Marouani
Collections: Portraits, Kitchen Prints, Pop Art