// JavaScript Document
indexSeparator = ' | ';
// Add one line per photo, using
// addPhoto ('filename', 'caption', 'index text');
// The third parameter is optional and will default to the number
// of the photo if not provided.

addPhoto(' lilly.jpg',"Ref: Lillies triptych 01 /  Aquarelle: 3 x (64 x 104) cm<hr width=100% size=1 noshade>  This triptych is part of a set that focuses on the relation between the Yin and the Yang, the day and the night, the birth and the death. Each work includes the eye of the artist in the background as a recurrent theme, which can be interpreted as an invitation to observe and meditate about the life complexion. The lilies under a light wind start their life before to get the energy from the sun at the full strengh age, until they will die in the third part. Nevertheless we can see an open hole of light in the dark sky, and also the spot of the moon, which are appealing to the infinite or the pass to another life, depending on the belief of the onlooker. (2003)");
addPhoto(' lotus.jpg',"Ref: Lotus triptych 02 /  Aquarelle: 3 x (64 x 104) cm<hr width=100% size=1 noshade><p>      When looking at the original paintings, the angle of view and the dimension applied to the lotus reduce us to the size of the fauna that is living under the protection of these plants. If we prefer to keep our human shape, than the stems of the lotus look like the huge trees of the equatorial forest. In both cases the pictures point out our real size and place in the nature, which we should respect well if we hope to enjoy its treasures for still a long time. (2000)</p>");
addPhoto(' luangprabang.jpg',"Ref: Luang Prabang triptych 03 /  Aquarelle: 3 x (64 x 104) cm<hr width=100% size=1 noshade><p>  Triptych by way of conclusion following several month in Luang Prabang, this set includes some significant elements of the town. For instance the frangipanis flowers, from which the scent hangs heavy in the streets and gives out the fragrance to the water during buddhist ceremonies, the silver glint of the Mekong and the Poussi Mountain under the spell of the moon that gives the pace to the religious life. (2000)</p>");
addPhoto(' sithit.jpg',"Ref: Sithit triptych 04 /  Aquarelle: 3 x (64 x 104) cm<hr width=100% size=1 noshade><p>  The Yin and Yang theme is applied here to the country of the author. The flower used is a rare lily of Thailand, from which the bulb gives birth to four flowers that can be seen as the cardinal points. From the quite big size of the three original paintings, it's difficult to figure out in this reduced screen picture the different regions in the four corners of the kingdom. The swinging can be interpreted as the movements that impulses the social, politic and economic evolution of the Thai nation. (2000)</p>")
addPhoto(' sun.jpg',"Ref: Sunflowers triptych 05 /  Aquarelle: 3 x (64 x 104) cm<hr width=100% size=1 noshade><p>  This triptych is part of a set that focuses on the relation between the Yin and the Yang, the day and the night, the birth and the death. Each work includes the eye of the artist in the background as a recurrent theme, which can be interpreted as an invitation to observe and meditate about the life complexion. The sunflowers as far as the eye can see in the fields of the south-west of France embody the human population. The elements standing out of the crowd must be the women and men that engrave the history of the humanity, and the seeds dropped by the last sunflower, the knowledge passed on by the ancient to carry on with the emancipation of this humanity. (1999)</p>");

