Acrylic on canvas
124cm x 93cm
Solid Blackwood frame
This is the next part sits within my ongoing exploration of liminal space. The in-between moments where something has ended but what follows is not yet fully formed.
The work holds a sense of pause rather than resolution. Its surface is built through layered applications of paint, allowing earlier decisions to remain visible beneath quieter passages. These traces are intentional. They speak to continuity rather than erasure, acknowledging that change rarely arrives cleanly and that each stage carries what came before.
The composition resists certainty. Areas of density sit alongside more open, permeable sections, creating a subtle tension between grounding and movement. The painting does not announce arrival. Instead, it reflects the subtle internal shift that occurs when forward motion has already begun, even if it is not yet fully recognised.
This is the next part is not about transformation as an event, but transformation as a process. A quiet acknowledgment that something has changed, and that what follows will be shaped by what is already held within the surface.
Currently resting in my studio DM me to view.
Acrylic on canvas
124cm x 93cm
Solid Blackwood frame
This is the next part sits within my ongoing exploration of liminal space. The in-between moments where something has ended but what follows is not yet fully formed.
The work holds a sense of pause rather than resolution. Its surface is built through layered applications of paint, allowing earlier decisions to remain visible beneath quieter passages. These traces are intentional. They speak to continuity rather than erasure, acknowledging that change rarely arrives cleanly and that each stage carries what came before.
The composition resists certainty. Areas of density sit alongside more open, permeable sections, creating a subtle tension between grounding and movement. The painting does not announce arrival. Instead, it reflects the subtle internal shift that occurs when forward motion has already begun, even if it is not yet fully recognised.
This is the next part is not about transformation as an event, but transformation as a process. A quiet acknowledgment that something has changed, and that what follows will be shaped by what is already held within the surface.
Currently resting in my studio DM me to view.