Latest Series:

Celestial Mischief By Élvs

In Celestial Mischief, Élvs revisits the cherub—not as a symbol of passive innocence, but as a quietly subversive presence. Across both sculptural works and limited-edition prints, the artist sets classical iconography against a distinctly contemporary sensibility.

The prints draw on the visual language of vintage etching—fine linework, delicate cross-hatching—recast with a knowing lightness of touch. In contrast, the sculptures translate these gestures into weight and permanence, rendered in Stainless steel with a disarming clarity.

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About The Artist

Élvs is the moniker of British contemporary artist Elvis Ellis. His practice functions as a site of historical collision, where the rigor of traditional art history is interrogated through a sharp, contemporary lens. By synthesizing classical canons with modern techniques, Élvs navigates the tension between the disciplined hand of the Old Masters and a raw, fluid abstraction. Deeply informed by the lineage of Abstract Expressionism, Élvs prioritizes the intuitive gesture. His visual language draws from the visceral spontaneity of Cy Twombly and the structural deconstructions of Picasso, while engaging in a spirited dialogue with the subversive irony of Urs Fischer and the heavy, gestural presence of Joe Bradley.
A central pillar of the work is the secular resurrection of the Cherub (Putto). In a modern nod to Donatello, Élvs reclaims the figure for the current era—stripping it of religious weight to reveal a symbol of raw, honest play. Here, the figure is no longer an icon of the divine, but a vessel for the "light side of the moon"—a metaphorical doorway through which the viewer is invited to escape the gravity of the modern world. The work is a persistent study in scale, amplifying the minute into the monumental. Whether through expansive canvas, sculptural cast marble, or immersive animation, the interventions of Élvs command the space they inhabit.
Emerging from the same Bristolian creative epicenter that produced Damien Hirst and Banksy, Élvs continues a heritage of provocative artistry—positioning raw beauty and uninhibited play as the most radical acts of the contemporary landscape.

Petit échangiste

French for “Little Swinger” — captures the fleeting joy of weightlessness, as a cherub arcs through the air on a swing.
Drawing on Rococo art’s fascination with play and sensuality—most famously Fragonard’s The Swing—Élvs reinterprets the scene with a modern twist. The cherub becomes both timeless and subversive: a figure caught between innocence and abandon, reminding us that freedom often lives in moments of suspension, when gravity gives way to imagination.

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