Picture a canvas: two fighters frozen mid-collision, but the canvas refuses the usual rules. Gloves are made of paper cranes, taped with constellations; sweat becomes watercolor rivers that dissolve into fractal patterns. Lgis paints combat as choreography—an intimate conversation between bodies and the things that haunt them. The gloves are relics; the ring, a worn diary. Around the ropes, small details tug at the eye: a moth caught in the mesh, a stitched-up photograph, graffiti that reads a date you recognize but can’t place.
Lgis’s boxing is not about winners and losers. It’s about the persistence of tenderness in a world that demands spectacle, about how we wrap our vulnerabilities in tape and present them to the public like offerings. It’s a study in how humanity can be both softly made and fiercely defended. lgis boxing deviantart
If you find yourself pulled into Lgis’s ring, expect to be unsettled and comforted at once. Expect to remember the smell of rain on concrete and the sound of a fist landing soft as a syllable. Expect the unexpected: a flourish of origami, a stitched-up photograph, a bird that refuses to leave. And when you step back from the page, you’ll feel, briefly, like someone who has just watched two strangers share something true in the middle of a crowded room. Picture a canvas: two fighters frozen mid-collision, but
The color palette shifts with the narrative. Early pieces glow with washed-out nostalgia—sepia tones and milk-blue gloves—then snap to neon as stakes rise: fluorescent pinks and alarm-clock reds that make the crowd feel less like people and more like a constellation of expectations. Lgis uses negative space as punctuation; silence on the canvas speaks as loudly as a smashed jaw. Sometimes the background is a bedroom wall plastered with posters; sometimes it’s a subway car whose windows show alternate weather systems. The city breathes around the fighters, an accomplice and a critic. The gloves are relics; the ring, a worn diary