Invisible Dignity interprets the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union as a silent yet essential presence, supporting and protecting without visually imposing itself.
The figures are reduced to the essential: they do not represent specific individuals, but a shared condition. The gestures are simple—a contact, a closeness—and therefore universal.
The large, rarefied space amplifies the sense of balance and respect. Nothing is spectacular, nothing is imposed: rights exist as an invisible structure that makes coexistence possible.
The work conveys the idea that fundamental rights are not seen, but are perceived in relationships, in gestures, in the possibility of existing with dignity within a common space.
Prompt:
"Minimal contemporary digital artwork with a soft figurative approach, two or more human figures represented in a simplified and calm way, gestures of support such as a touch, a handshake or standing close together, figures partially simplified and softly blended into the background, large empty spaces creating a sense of quiet and reflection, smooth surfaces with minimal texture, soft diffused light and gentle transitions, color palette with off-white, light grey, soft blue and warm neutral tones, balanced and centered composition, atmosphere of dignity, protection and equality, no text, no symbols, contemporary artistic style"