The Common Foundation takes shape from the Schuman Declaration of 1950, when Europe first imagined a shared future based on cooperation rather than conflict.
The geometric shapes interlock like structural elements, evoking shared industrial materials and production systems. What once represented division and competition is reorganized into a visual balance that suggests stability, interdependence, and collective construction.
The work visually translates a radical political intuition: peace not simply as the absence of war, but as the result of a shared structure. In this abstract architecture, European integration emerges as a concrete process, made of connections, agreements, and mutual responsibilities.
Prompt:
"Abstract contemporary digital artwork conceived as a structured visual system, interlocking geometric forms suggesting industrial materials and shared foundations, strong linear elements and modular shapes representing connection and integration, balanced composition with vertical and horizontal alignments, minimal color palette with steel grey, deep blue, muted beige and subtle warm accents, flat surfaces and architectural clarity, visual sense of construction, cooperation and stability, no figurative elements, no text, no symbols, suitable for a contemporary European cultural exhibition."