


Jean-Baptiste
Acrylic on Canvas (70cm x 60 cm)
In this radiant painting by Eduardo Ahmin, a figure emerges like a myth reborn—half deity, half dream—wrapped in the quiet mysticism of sea and starlight. His gaze is steady, his lips gently parted as though on the verge of a revelation. His skin glows with the warmth of sunlit marble, tender and resolute, as if carved by light itself.
He wears a helm crowned by a golden compass rose—north, south, east, west—evoking the timeless pull of navigation, destiny, and divine purpose. Around his shoulders, a cloak of silvery fish and fluid fins swirls like a gentle tide, suggesting both armor and offering, as if the ocean itself has chosen him as its emissary. The background remains hushed and pale, allowing the figure—and the delicate fish that drift by like spirits—to shimmer in quiet majesty.
Ahmin has crafted a portrait that feels both ancient and visionary, a sacred mariner whose strength lies in serenity. He is a symbol of balance: between the wild and the wise, the earthly and the eternal. A quiet god of tides and tenderness, standing calmly at the center of the compass, waiting to guide the lost.
Acrylic on Canvas (70cm x 60 cm)
In this radiant painting by Eduardo Ahmin, a figure emerges like a myth reborn—half deity, half dream—wrapped in the quiet mysticism of sea and starlight. His gaze is steady, his lips gently parted as though on the verge of a revelation. His skin glows with the warmth of sunlit marble, tender and resolute, as if carved by light itself.
He wears a helm crowned by a golden compass rose—north, south, east, west—evoking the timeless pull of navigation, destiny, and divine purpose. Around his shoulders, a cloak of silvery fish and fluid fins swirls like a gentle tide, suggesting both armor and offering, as if the ocean itself has chosen him as its emissary. The background remains hushed and pale, allowing the figure—and the delicate fish that drift by like spirits—to shimmer in quiet majesty.
Ahmin has crafted a portrait that feels both ancient and visionary, a sacred mariner whose strength lies in serenity. He is a symbol of balance: between the wild and the wise, the earthly and the eternal. A quiet god of tides and tenderness, standing calmly at the center of the compass, waiting to guide the lost.
Acrylic on Canvas (70cm x 60 cm)
In this radiant painting by Eduardo Ahmin, a figure emerges like a myth reborn—half deity, half dream—wrapped in the quiet mysticism of sea and starlight. His gaze is steady, his lips gently parted as though on the verge of a revelation. His skin glows with the warmth of sunlit marble, tender and resolute, as if carved by light itself.
He wears a helm crowned by a golden compass rose—north, south, east, west—evoking the timeless pull of navigation, destiny, and divine purpose. Around his shoulders, a cloak of silvery fish and fluid fins swirls like a gentle tide, suggesting both armor and offering, as if the ocean itself has chosen him as its emissary. The background remains hushed and pale, allowing the figure—and the delicate fish that drift by like spirits—to shimmer in quiet majesty.
Ahmin has crafted a portrait that feels both ancient and visionary, a sacred mariner whose strength lies in serenity. He is a symbol of balance: between the wild and the wise, the earthly and the eternal. A quiet god of tides and tenderness, standing calmly at the center of the compass, waiting to guide the lost.