The Man Behind the Art: Titius Justus
Artist. Architect. Storyteller. Steward of Symbolic Truth.
TimeReproofPortraits began with a single creator — Titius Justus — a man who refused to let art become hollow, identity become optional, or truth become disposable. His work is not the product of impulse or trend. It is the result of conviction, revelation, and a lifelong pursuit of meaning.
Titius is not merely a designer.
He is a translator of the unseen.
He takes the spiritual and gives it form.
He takes the symbolic and gives it structure.
He takes the eternal and gives it texture.
Every collection he creates is a chapter in a larger story — a story of identity, heritage, beauty, and purpose.
A Creator Formed by Identity and Revelation
Titius creates from a place of depth.
His work is shaped by:
- A reverence for Hebrew identity and heritage
- A commitment to truth and covenant
- A fascination with symbolic language
- A love for botanical and geometric beauty
- A desire to elevate everyday life through art
He does not design to impress.
He designs to express.
His art is not decoration.
It is declaration.
His apparel is not fashion.
It is testimony.
His collections are not seasonal.
They are timeless.
The Vision That Drives the House
At the core of Titius’s creative philosophy is a simple but powerful conviction:
Art must speak. Apparel must declare. Design must reveal.
This conviction shapes everything he creates:
Symbolic Realism
Where symbols carry messages that outlive the moment.
Botanical Alchemy
Where flowers become metaphors and petals become poetry.
Digital Impressionism
Where light becomes language and color becomes emotion.
Hebrew Philosophy
Where identity is honored, covenant is remembered, and truth is illustrated.
Apparel‑First Expression
Where the body becomes a canvas and the wardrobe becomes a gallery.
Titius builds worlds, not products.
He crafts meaning, not merchandise.
A Life Committed to Creative Stewardship
Titius approaches creativity as stewardship — a responsibility, not a hobby.
He believes that every design must serve a purpose, every symbol must carry weight, and every collection must honor the Source from which all creativity flows.