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Light Aquatic is a piece about motion, clarity, and depth. I painted this abstract fluid work as a kind of breath—like light moving across water, or spirit surfacing through memory. With luminous whites, electric blues, sea greens, and golden accents, this work carries the sensation of diving into something mysterious and emerging transformed.
If you're drawn to water, to softness with strength, to art that helps you exhale—this painting is for you. It brings calm energy and layered stillness to a room.
Wassily Kandinsky called blue “the typical heavenly colour,” pulling us toward the infinite. The quick sparks of saffron and copper hint at revelation—James Turrell notes that warm light “makes you aware of your own seeing.” Together these tones suggest a meeting of water and fire, surrender and illumination—an invitation for you to find light inside the wave.
Light Aquatic is a piece about motion, clarity, and depth. I painted this abstract fluid work as a kind of breath—like light moving across water, or spirit surfacing through memory. With luminous whites, electric blues, sea greens, and golden accents, this work carries the sensation of diving into something mysterious and emerging transformed.
If you're drawn to water, to softness with strength, to art that helps you exhale—this painting is for you. It brings calm energy and layered stillness to a room.
Wassily Kandinsky called blue “the typical heavenly colour,” pulling us toward the infinite. The quick sparks of saffron and copper hint at revelation—James Turrell notes that warm light “makes you aware of your own seeing.” Together these tones suggest a meeting of water and fire, surrender and illumination—an invitation for you to find light inside the wave.
Light Aquatic is a piece about motion, clarity, and depth. I painted this abstract fluid work as a kind of breath—like light moving across water, or spirit surfacing through memory. With luminous whites, electric blues, sea greens, and golden accents, this work carries the sensation of diving into something mysterious and emerging transformed.
If you're drawn to water, to softness with strength, to art that helps you exhale—this painting is for you. It brings calm energy and layered stillness to a room.
Wassily Kandinsky called blue “the typical heavenly colour,” pulling us toward the infinite. The quick sparks of saffron and copper hint at revelation—James Turrell notes that warm light “makes you aware of your own seeing.” Together these tones suggest a meeting of water and fire, surrender and illumination—an invitation for you to find light inside the wave.