PopRelicism is the art of memory rendered through culture. It transforms the familiar symbols of pop culture into relics of lived experience — worn, weathered, and imbued with the passage of time. Each work carries the echo of collective memory, filtered through expression and the subtle traces of human emotion.
In PopRelicism, surfaces are aged, textures are lived-in, and colors bear the residue of nostalgia. Pop icons are not presented directly; they appear as ghosts, fragments, or impressions — glimpses of a world remembered rather than depicted.
This movement embraces the beauty of imperfection, the poetry of decay, and the resonance of cultural memory. It is both a reflection and a relic: a dialogue between the past and the present, the familiar and the abstract, the seen and the remembered.

