Quadripolarity is a set of 64 stoneware tiles arranged and assembled in four 50 cm by 50 cm frames.
Each set of 16 has its own color, with the first three frames representing the primary colors used in the artist's paintings 'a butter world': ochre yellow, cobalt blue, and iron oxide red; colors achieved with slip on white stoneware. The fourth frame features ceramics made with anthracite gray clay onto which the three colors have been projected.
These four frames tell a family story.
The red is called 'the victim.'
The multicolored on gray clay is called 'the tormentor.'
The blue, 'overcontrol.'
The yellow is called 'the disloyal.
The abstract shape of the tile results from a study of the portrait and the nose of the artist's son, Félix.
The 4 frames are independent and can be arranged in various ways and in different orders. Here, they are shown arranged in a square and in a line.