
Corbusier by Florent Bodart
Florent Bodart's Corbusier portrait is a study in editorial wit and graphic economy. The French illustrator distills the architect's iconic silhouette — round glasses, deliberate gaze, the geometry of the man himself — into a composition that feels both celebratory and gently irreverent. Forms are simplified to their essentials, color is used sparingly and purposefully, and the overall image carries the kind of confident lightness that marks Bodart's best work. It is illustration that knows exactly what it wants to say.
Printed in Berlin as an archival fine art print, the clean linework and flat color fields are rendered with crisp sharpness on matte fine art paper — exactly the clarity this kind of graphic illustration calls for.
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Corbusier by Florent Bodart
Florent Bodart's Corbusier portrait is a study in editorial wit and graphic economy. The French illustrator distills the architect's iconic silhouette — round glasses, deliberate gaze, the geometry of the man himself — into a composition that feels both celebratory and gently irreverent. Forms are simplified to their essentials, color is used sparingly and purposefully, and the overall image carries the kind of confident lightness that marks Bodart's best work. It is illustration that knows exactly what it wants to say.
Printed in Berlin as an archival fine art print, the clean linework and flat color fields are rendered with crisp sharpness on matte fine art paper — exactly the clarity this kind of graphic illustration calls for.
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Florent Bodart's Corbusier portrait is a study in editorial wit and graphic economy. The French illustrator distills the architect's iconic silhouette — round glasses, deliberate gaze, the geometry of the man himself — into a composition that feels both celebratory and gently irreverent. Forms are simplified to their essentials, color is used sparingly and purposefully, and the overall image carries the kind of confident lightness that marks Bodart's best work. It is illustration that knows exactly what it wants to say.
Printed in Berlin as an archival fine art print, the clean linework and flat color fields are rendered with crisp sharpness on matte fine art paper — exactly the clarity this kind of graphic illustration calls for.























