Emotion in Motion.
Expressionism, instinct, and geometry in constant movement.
Intuitive expressionist works where color leads, structure follows, and every canvas captures a single irrepeatable moment.
Fragments of emotion, form, and movement.
A curated set of series exploring human presence, urban silence, raw color, and untamed instinct — all through intuitive expressionism.
First Impulse
The beginning of the practice. Raw, unfiltered works where emotion arrives before control — painted without intention to please, only to exist.
Human Fragments
Minimal silhouettes and abstracted faces capturing tension, vulnerability, and the quiet noise inside the human mind.
Red Emotions
A signature red–white–black palette exploring anger, desire, conflict, and release through raw, intuitive gesture.
Urban Silence
Windows, corridors, and night lights inspired by Hopper — stillness framed within geometric spaces.
Energy Waves
Pure abstract motion: lines, arcs, and color fields mapping the invisible rhythm of thought and emotion.
Untamed Creatures
Animal forms reduced to instinct and gesture — claws, horns, movement emerging from intense contrasts.
M. Anton works through instinct, not sketches.
His paintings sit somewhere between intuitive expressionism, modern fauvism, and quiet geometric structure — where color speaks first and form arrives later.
M. Anton is a self-taught visual artist whose practice is driven by raw emotion and immediacy. He works quickly, without preliminary drawing, allowing gestures, color blocks and fragmented shapes to collide directly on the canvas.
Influenced by Feininger, Matisse, Modigliani and Hopper, his work blends brutal color with subtle architectural echoes and elongated human figures. Each piece is treated as a captured moment — a single emotional state frozen just before it changes.
Emotion in Motion is not just a tagline for his work; it is the method. The painting only lives if the feeling moves through it.
Latest notes from the studio.
Recent entries capturing movement, instinct, and emotion.