top of page

Ôvae

Meets Your Imagination

face.jpg
van gogh-1.png

Meets Your 
Imagination

Ôvae

Meets Your Imagination

face.jpg

Meets Your Imagination

Concept vision

A diamond is already art. Cut with precision, shaped by time, impossible to replicate. So why should its story end in jewelry?

At Ôvae, we believe diamonds deserve a greater canvas. Not to sit on display, but to live inside works that move us. We place them where they have never gone before…into paintings, sculptures, objects, sound, scent, and space. For artists, Ôvae offers a new material, a new language, a new way to make meaning tangible. For galleries, it is the chance to present a form of art the world has not yet witnessed, one that draws attention not with shine but with substance. For collectors and investors, each piece carries both emotional depth and lasting value, uniting the cultural impact of contemporary art with the trusted permanence of diamonds. This is not about luxury as ornament. It is about using rarity as expression. Ôvae is not following tradition. It is creating its own.

Café Terrace at Night

van gogh-1.png

Description of  Café Terrace at Night by Vincent van Gogh:

 

“Café Terrace at Night” (1888) is one of Vincent van Gogh’s most iconic works, capturing a warm, inviting evening scene in Arles, France. The painting shows a glowing café lit by golden lanterns, spilling light onto the cobbled street as patrons sit at small tables under the night sky. Deep blues and purples dominate the background, contrasting with the vibrant yellow of the café. The starry sky—one of Van Gogh’s signatures—is dotted with sparkling points of light, evoking peace and wonder. The tilted perspective and bold brushstrokes give the scene energy and depth, making it feel alive. Van Gogh painted this from life, not using black in the night sky, showing how he could create darkness with rich, vibrant color instead. This piece reflects Van Gogh’s fascination with night scenes and his emotional use of color and light.

 

Would you like a version of this for a school project or an art gallery label?

face.jpg

Who am I? Who am I? Who am I? Finally, after a long reflection on this question, practically my entire life so far without a concrete answer allowing me to finally breathe and live in peace. After so many long journeys, encounters, introspection, externalization, trials, high and low tides, with and without waves, passion and boredom, motivation and depression. Rocked intimately outside myself between America and Europe, Montreal, Paris, New York, Bali… and so on! I still cannot find this answer, still not this full stop to this sentence of life, and so much the better! Otherwise, where will I go next? Where will I enrich myself with the culture and inner values ​​of others, with their difficulties and their generous souls, with their expulsion as well as their warm welcome. Where will I nourish myself? I'm not talking about the bodily needs of the human body, but about that cultural satiety we only feel after having absorbed everything we can during the limited time of the day. Knowing who I am deep down, I would never have that pleasure. I am so happy to still be in this perpetual quest that punctuates and rocks my daily life, in search of this identity!

 

Thank you for this magnificent piece of fiction. More seriously, I am Matya Boukir, a young Franco-Arab painter and artist from Montreuil (a suburb of Paris), who, thanks to my numerous travels to Montreal, Paris, and New York, has the pleasure of presenting these works full of energy and doubts. I hope you enjoy!

Malnuit

This work was mainly inspired by my visions and imagination, obviously inspired by artists who I admire like Dali for his extravagance and imagination so truly expressed. And others like Toulouse Lautrec and Benjamin-Constant for their styles and impacts. This piece of art expresses and shows my deep visualization during my prayers (which I hope will bode well). It symbolizes the immensity of a need to escape from an enormous illusion. This allows me to unload my anxiety and reveal my deep energy by showing it in the form of an image and painting. I hope that it will direct you toward your true desires in life and open you to new imaginative horizons. Dream well

IMG_1407.jpg
sam's painting.png

Sam is an artist based in New York City. He is currently pursuing an MFA in Industrial Design at Parsons School of Design, with a BFA and Architecture Minor from Cornell. Sam uses paint, sculpture, and digital media to explore the relationship of perception and creation. By invoking the perpetual human experience of searching for clarity from ambiguity, he honors a universal struggle to build meaning.

 

Sam's art has also been featured in Vice Magazine, the Herbert F. Johnson Museum, Boston City Hall, the Kennedy Space Center, and one of 1stDibs' first digital art exhibitions.  Additionally, he was accepted into the 2020 Best of SUNY and SUNY Chancellor’s Gallery Exhibitions. Sam was selected for Cornell’s 2020 Anderson Ranch Painting Scholarship, a \art grant, BitBasel’s CryptoArt for Impact and Innovation Challenge, and the 2020 Edith Adams & Walter King Stone Award in recognition of work filled with promise in advance of his thesis year. He had the honor of being curated for the first digital art collection on the moon, contained in a nickel disc aboard the US' first return mission in over 50 years in February 2024. Sam has collaborated with Ponce Neuroscience Lab at Harvard University several times, including as part of his thesis exhibition. Most recently, Sam's work was shortlisted by the Philadelphia Museum of Art for its annual Collab Student Design Competition.

Sam Price Studio

When astronauts on the Apollo missions first observed the pale blue dot of our planet from space, a new perspective on the fragility of life emerged on a different level than any earthbound preservation instinct.

As commercial space travel overshadows mankind's first in-person impressions of the Earth from space, I contemplate the impact that the overview effect would have on many more in a future time when this experience is increasingly democratized. This thought is complemented by my image of a giant crowd fading into the stars-humanity becoming more integrated into a greater cosmic perspective.

PHOTO-2025-05-15-12-13-40.jpg

Café Terrace at Night

van gogh-1.png

Description of  Café Terrace at Night by Vincent van Gogh:

 

“Café Terrace at Night” (1888) is one of Vincent van Gogh’s most iconic works, capturing a warm, inviting evening scene in Arles, France. The painting shows a glowing café lit by golden lanterns, spilling light onto the cobbled street as patrons sit at small tables under the night sky. Deep blues and purples dominate the background, contrasting with the vibrant yellow of the café. The starry sky—one of Van Gogh’s signatures—is dotted with sparkling points of light, evoking peace and wonder. The tilted perspective and bold brushstrokes give the scene energy and depth, making it feel alive. Van Gogh painted this from life, not using black in the night sky, showing how he could create darkness with rich, vibrant color instead. This piece reflects Van Gogh’s fascination with night scenes and his emotional use of color and light.

 

Would you like a version of this for a school project or an art gallery label?

bottom of page