A vivid abstract, crowded but tightly held. Hot pink, orange, white and turquoise jostle through the upper half. Bands of lime green and dark teal cut across the middle. The lower passages drift into ...
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| Overview | |
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Color
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Tags
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Abstract,
Contemporary,
Expressionism,
Modern,
Colourful
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| Concept and Style | |
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Topics
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Movement & Energy , Color Dynamics
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Styles
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Abstract Expressionism , Gestural , Contemporary
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Shape
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Vertical
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| Recommended Spaces | |
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Estate Type
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Room Type
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| Visual and Stylistic Elements | |
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Objects
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Brushstrokes , Splashes , Drips
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A vivid abstract, crowded but tightly held. Hot pink, orange, white and turquoise jostle through the upper half. Bands of lime green and dark teal cut across the middle. The lower passages drift into pale lemon and washed pink, like reflections in shallow water. The whole picture moves in vertical pulls, as if a busy street had been scraped across the canvas.
The palette is bold but worked in clean zones: magenta, coral, lime, turquoise, soft white. Each color stays in its own area. The white opens the picture between the bright bands. The dark teal acts as a quiet anchor in the upper left.
This belongs in calm, modern interiors that can take one strong, bright picture. Pale plaster walls, oak or smoked floors, a long linen sofa in a quiet color, a stone lamp, a wool rug. The vertical format suits a hallway run, the wall beside a tall door, a study above a desk, or a long bedroom run. In a boutique hotel suite, a salon or a designer showroom, it reads as a confident, modern accent against quiet furniture.
Up close, the surface tells you it is a hand-painted oil painting on canvas. Each color has been pulled with a wide tool in short vertical drags, the paint scraped thin so a paler underlayer breathes through in places. A few highlights are scratched back almost to white. The lower band is brushed soft and watery. A picture light from above lifts the brighter ridges and deepens the dark teal. Modern abstract wall art for an edited, contemporary room.
Buyers of abstract paintings on canvas often pair this work with other large-format canvases.
- Composition, Colors & Visual Details
- Best Rooms & Interior Pairings
- Color Palette & Mood
- Hand-Painted Texture & Technique
- Size & Placement Tips
A vivid abstract, crowded but tightly held. Hot pink, orange, white and turquoise jostle through the upper half.
Visual cues include brushstrokes, drips, and splashes. The palette is anchored by blue, green, and orange. The composition is vertical.
Best suited for a dining room, hallway, and home office. Works well in beauty salon and boutique hotel.
Pairs naturally with abstract expressionism and gestural interiors. A vertical hang reads well above a sideboard or a narrow console.
Color-wise, the piece works with blue, green, orange, and pink. The overall temperature is cool, settling the room into a calm and considered mood.
Painted by hand in oil on stretched canvas by a single painter. Layers of oil build up over the underpainting, so the surface carries visible weight and the brushwork stays legible.
The abstract expressionism character runs through the underpainting, while the gestural feel emerges in the surface passes. For Color Surge 2, drying and varnishing follow the traditional oil-painting cycle so the finished surface holds without yellowing. The vertical stretch keys the canvas tighter at the long edges, which is what holds a tall format true on the wall.
A vertical canvas reads well above a narrow console, a slim sideboard, or beside a doorway — anywhere the eye needs a column of focus. Hang the centre about 145-155 cm above the floor, with at least 30 cm of clear wall on either side.
In a dining room, Color Surge 2 reads best on the wall you look at first when entering. Step back to roughly twice the canvas height to take Color Surge 2 in — that is the distance the painter worked at.
Three paintings inspired by the same theme.