
The Magic Pill
A giant capsule stands where the character should be. Smiling. Confident. Giving a reassuring thumbs-up. The promise is simple: take the pill and everything will be fine. Part of the Happy Never After series, The Magic Pill explores society's fascination with quick fixes and the desire to solve discomfort, anxiety, exhaustion, or dissatisfaction through a single solution. Beneath its playful appearance lies a question about dependency, performance, and the pressure to remain functional at all costs. Using the visual language of childhood cartoons and bold pop colors, the work contrasts innocence with the complexities of adult coping mechanisms, transforming a familiar character into the very thing it relies upon. Created in acrylic on canvas with strong graphic lines, vibrant color contrasts, and visible texture.

Muriel Elmaleh
Muriel Elmaleh is a contemporary artist whose work moves between abstract expression, dark pop imagery, and emotionally charged symbolism. Working primarily with acrylic on canvas, she explores themes of identity, nostalgia, emotional tension, and modern psychological survival through color, gesture, distortion, and contrast. Her practice balances spontaneity with restraint — shifting between dense, immersive compositions and quieter minimalist works influenced by abstract expressionism and musical structure. Across both abstract and figurative pieces, familiar imagery is often reinterpreted through darker emotional undertones, transforming childhood icons, cultural references, and symbolic forms into reflections on performance, dependency, exhaustion, and transformation. Influenced in part by her childhood in Ivory Coast, Elmaleh’s work also carries traces of memory, cultural storytelling, and emotional inheritance, sometimes expressed through bold palettes, simplified forms, and African-inspired visual language. Self-taught and instinct-driven, Elmaleh approaches painting as an intuitive and physical act — guided by rhythm, emotion, and the tension between surface and what lies beneath it.
Muriel Elmaleh is a contemporary artist whose work moves between abstract expression, dark pop imagery, and emotionally charged symbolism. Working primarily with acrylic on canvas, she explores themes of identity, nostalgia, emotional tension, and modern psychological survival through color, gesture, distortion, and contrast. Her practice balances spontaneity with restraint — shifting between dense, immersive compositions and quieter minimalist works influenced by abstract expressionism and musical structure. Across both abstract and figurative pieces, familiar imagery is often reinterpreted through darker emotional undertones, transforming childhood icons, cultural references, and symbolic forms into reflections on performance, dependency, exhaustion, and transformation. Influenced in part by her childhood in Ivory Coast, Elmaleh’s work also carries traces of memory, cultural storytelling, and emotional inheritance, sometimes expressed through bold palettes, simplified forms, and African-inspired visual language. Self-taught and instinct-driven, Elmaleh approaches painting as an intuitive and physical act — guided by rhythm, emotion, and the tension between surface and what lies beneath it.