Two ribbons, two arcs, one gesture each. The lower ribbon rises in a tall arched curve from the bottom-left edge; the upper ribbon sweeps in from the right and bends down through the center. Along the...
-
✈️ Free Worldwide Shipping & Production Times
-
🛡️ 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee & Returns
-
🎨 100% Hand-Painted Oil Art
-
100% Hand-Painted Oil
-
Free Worldwide Shipping
-
Museum-Quality Standards
| Overview | |
|---|---|
|
Color
|
|
|
Tags
|
|
| Concept and Style | |
|
Topics
|
Luxury & Elegance , Simplicity & Clarity
|
|
Styles
|
Minimalism , Contemporary
|
|
Shape
|
Vertical
|
| Recommended Spaces | |
|
Estate Type
|
|
|
Room Type
|
|
| Visual and Stylistic Elements | |
|
Objects
|
Lines , Texture , Shapes
|
Two ribbons, two arcs, one gesture each. The lower ribbon rises in a tall arched curve from the bottom-left edge; the upper ribbon sweeps in from the right and bends down through the center. Along their entire length the painter has combed the wet medium into tight concentric striations, so the warm gold catches light as a row of fine parallel grooves. Between them, the white ground is troweled in soft irregular slabs.
It is a study in calm tension. The ribbons never touch — they almost meet, then slip past each other, leaving a bright corridor of plaster-thick white between them. From a step away the picture reads as pure rhythm; up close the surface gives you two completely different paint behaviors: ordered grooves on the gold, free trowel marks on the white.
This kind of canvas wall art works best where the warm gold tone can carry a single accent without competing — a bedroom with neutral linen, a dressing room, a calm hallway, a hotel-suite headboard wall, a beauty-salon reception. The vertical proportions suit a tall column of wall. A picture light angled from above will pull the striations on each ribbon into glittering relief.
The hand of the maker is everywhere. Visible brushstroke texture across the white ground, palette-knife ridges in the impasto, the combed gold-toned passages — all the marks of a hand-painted oil painting on canvas. A textured oil painting that holds a confident, minimal silhouette across the room and turns into a quiet sensory object as you approach.
Buyers of abstract oil painting 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
Two ribbons, two arcs, one gesture each. The lower ribbon rises in a tall arched curve from the bottom-left edge; the upper ribbon sweeps in from the right and bends down through the center.
Visual cues include lines, shapes, and texture. The palette is anchored by beige, gold, and white. The composition is vertical.
Best suited for a bedroom, hallway, and home office. Works well in beauty salon and boutique hotel.
Pairs naturally with minimalism interiors. A vertical hang reads well above a sideboard or a narrow console.
The dominant register is beige, gold, and white. The palette balances warm and cool registers, holding tension without falling on one side.
Painted by hand in oil on stretched canvas by a single painter. Surface is kept measured and flat, with brushwork that reads as deliberate rather than expressive.
The minimalism character runs through the underpainting, while the lines feel emerges in the surface passes. For Ribbon Curve 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 bedroom, Ribbon Curve 2 reads best on the wall you look at first when entering. Step back to roughly twice the canvas height to take Ribbon Curve 2 in — that is the distance the painter worked at.
Five paintings inspired by the same theme.