Built around bold black arches, parallel white curves and two terracotta circles on a warm cream ground, this graphic composition slots straight into mid-century and modern Boho rooms. The flat shapes...
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Color
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Tags
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| Concept and Style | |
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Topics
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Simplicity & Clarity , Structure & Order , Rhythm & Pattern
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Styles
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Minimalism , Geometric Abstraction , Contemporary
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Shape
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Vertical
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Estate Type
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Room Type
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Objects
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Lines , Shapes , Forms
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Built around bold black arches, parallel white curves and two terracotta circles on a warm cream ground, this graphic composition slots straight into mid-century and modern Boho rooms. The flat shapes feel architectural and meditative at once, giving the work a confident decorative voice without competing with strong furniture. It is the kind of artwork interior designers reach for when they want one anchor that immediately reads as intentional.
For a living room, hang it above a low boucle sofa in oatmeal or chalk white with a rust velvet lumbar pillow and a single woven leather pouf to repeat the terracotta tones. Pair with a rattan armchair, a travertine side table and a tall ceramic floor vase in matte clay. The warm cream ground keeps walls from feeling cold, so it plays especially well in homes already leaning into limewash, jute and cane finishes.
In a home office or studio nook, set it above a desk made from a warm oak slab with a brass swing-arm sconce at one corner, paired with a cognac leather chair. In a bedroom, hang it centered above a low platform bed dressed in linen in flax and ivory, with a clay-toned ceramic lamp on each nightstand. The composition is graphic enough to anchor the wall on its own, no companion piece needed.
For commercial schemes, consider boutique hotel suites, cafe seating walls, coworking phone booths and reception areas where you want a cheerful, considered moment without going loud. The Boho-modern palette pairs cleanly with rattan banquettes, terracotta tile floors and pale clay plaster. It also makes a strong over-the-counter or above-the-banquette piece in independent bakeries and lifestyle shops where mid-century styling drives the brand feel.
Hand-painted on canvas, it joins our wider range of hand-painted abstract painting.
- Composition, Colors & Visual Details
- Best Rooms & Interior Pairings
- Color Palette & Mood
- Hand-Painted Texture & Technique
- Size & Placement Tips
Built around bold black arches, parallel white curves and two terracotta circles on a warm cream ground, this graphic composition slots straight into mid-century and modern Boho rooms. The flat shapes feel architectural and meditative at once, giving the work a confident decorative voice without competing with strong furniture.
Visual cues include forms, lines, and shapes. The palette is anchored by beige, black, and cream. The composition is vertical.
The geometric abstraction character makes Arches and Terracotta Suns a natural fit for a bedroom. It also shows well in a dining room and hallway.
In commercial spaces, it suits boutique hotel and café. A vertical hang reads well above a sideboard or a narrow console.
The palette gathers around beige, black, cream, orange, and white. A cool atmosphere holds the surface together — the piece feels collected rather than charged.
The painter works in oil on stretched canvas, with no division of labour between sketch and finish. Surface is kept measured and flat, with brushwork that reads as deliberate rather than expressive.
The geometric abstraction character runs through the underpainting, while the minimalism feel emerges in the surface passes. The painter closes the cycle on Arches and Terracotta Suns with standard drying times and a clear final varnish, so the work is built to age well. The vertical stretch keys the canvas tighter at the long edges, which is what holds a tall format true on the wall.
Hang a vertical canvas where the wall itself is taller than it is wide; the format leans into that proportion. Leave 30 cm or more of wall on each side; the work asks for room to breathe vertically as well as horizontally.
Arches and Terracotta Suns suits a bedroom that is built around one piece rather than a collection. For Arches and Terracotta Suns, step back twice the canvas height once it’s hung — the brushwork resolves at that distance.