Notes from the studio
These notes do not aim to define the work, but to offer a glimpse into how it comes into being.
Lucas Thorik (1973) is a Dutch abstract artist based in The Hague. His work is recognised as
innovative and authentic, defined by a visual language that explores balance within contradictions:
movement and stillness, order and unrest, intensity and restraint. This tension is central to his
practice and closely connected to the way he thinks, observes and navigates the world.
Raised in an environment where art was always present, Thorik did not simply follow the path laid
out for him. Music, design, philosophy and street culture first shaped his creative outlook. This
broader foundation continues to inform the rhythm, structure and energy of his work today. He
approaches a painting much like a well-constructed DJ set: layered, evolving, resisting the
temptation of easy “hits,” and always working toward a coherent narrative.
His paintings emerge from doubt, inquiry and the deliberate creation of friction. Abstraction is not a
stylistic preference for Thorik, but a necessary way to reveal nuance. He does not begin with
themes or recognisable forms; instead he builds, removes, revises and lets go until a work feels
honest enough to stand on its own. For him, a painting should not rely on explanation.
Although deeply familiar with the elitist narratives of the art world he grew up around, Thorik
maintains a conscious distance from fixed systems or certainties. His work reflects an ongoing
internal dialogue: the pull between consistency and restlessness, overthinking and impulse, control
and release. No painting is a conclusion — each one is a moment within a continuous search, a
step closer to something that cannot be fully defined.
In recent years, his work has naturally attracted increasing international attention, something Thorik
meets with grounded perspective. For him, the process remains central: the attempt to find
temporary balance through colour, rhythm and structure — a balance that is deeply personal yet
open to the interpretation of others.