A solitary planet hangs in the left third of this horizontal canvas, its body mottled with cobalt, slate and a clean pass of warm gold along the lower curve. The space behind it opens into deep navy a...
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🎨 100% Hand-Painted Oil Art
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100% Hand-Painted Oil
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Color
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Tags
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Abstract,
Atmospheric,
Modern,
Contemporary,
Textured,
Gold Leaf
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| Concept and Style | |
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Topics
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Light & Shadow , Dreamlike & Atmospheric , Tranquility & Calm
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Styles
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Abstract Expressionism , Contemporary , Atmospheric
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Shape
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Horizontal
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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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Forms , Shapes , Layers , Texture
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A solitary planet hangs in the left third of this horizontal canvas, its body mottled with cobalt, slate and a clean pass of warm gold along the lower curve. The space behind it opens into deep navy and ink-black, with a torn cloud of bright gold and white drifting along the upper right edge — the whole picture pulls left to right like a slow cosmic exhale.
The composition trades on negative space. Most of the canvas is a layered field of dark blues with quick scratched whites that read as star-spray; the sphere is the only firm shape, and the gold cloud is the only bright counterpoint. The eye lands on the planet, follows the gold trail to the right, then drifts back through the moody field. Pacing is unhurried.
Color is held to a tight band: midnight navy, ink-black, a cool slate-blue and one warm note of gold. Contrast comes from value rather than hue — dark masses against a small flare of light — which gives the painting its quiet, contemplative weight. Up close the surface tells the story of a hand-painted oil on canvas: chunky palette-knife slabs forming the planet, dragged pulls of blue building the void, gilded passes laid in heavy enough to catch a real shadow.
This sits naturally in calm modern interiors — above a low charcoal sofa, behind a black walnut desk in a contemporary office, on a long wall in a master bedroom, or as the single horizontal piece in a wide minimalist hallway. Pair with brushed-brass lighting and oat-toned linen; a picture light from above brings the gold flare forward and lets the painting glow softly after dark.
This piece is offered as abstract wall art, painted to order on stretched canvas.
- Composition, Colors & Visual Details
- Best Rooms & Interior Pairings
- Color Palette & Mood
- Hand-Painted Texture & Technique
- Size & Placement Tips
A solitary planet hangs in the left third of this horizontal canvas, its body mottled with cobalt, slate and a clean pass of warm gold along the lower curve. Visual cues include forms, layers, and shapes.
The palette is anchored by black, blue, and gold. The composition is horizontal.
The abstract expressionism character makes Lone Sphere a natural fit for a bedroom. It also shows well in a hallway and home office.
In commercial spaces, it suits boutique hotel and hotel. A horizontal hang reads well above a sofa or a low credenza.
The dominant register is black, blue, gold, navy, and white. A cool atmosphere holds the surface together — the piece feels collected rather than charged.
Each canvas is laid in by one painter from start to finish, in oil on stretched cotton. 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 atmospheric feel emerges in the surface passes. The painter closes the cycle on Lone Sphere with standard drying times and a clear final varnish, so the work is built to age well. The horizontal stretch is keyed at the long edges first; that is what keeps the canvas from bowing across a wider span.
Horizontal formats want a wider stretch of wall; over a sofa, a sideboard, or a low bench is where they read most calmly. Allow the bottom edge to sit a hand-span above the surface below — about 20 cm — so the work doesn’t feel piled. Lone Sphere suits a bedroom that is built around one piece rather than a collection.
Available sizes: huge. Pick the size to the wall, not the wall to the size. For Lone Sphere, step back twice the canvas height once it’s hung — the brushwork resolves at that distance.