Description
-
Visual Dispersion (Mottled): The primary foliage forms exhibit “Internal Textural Mottling.” The pigment is dispersed in uneven clusters that suggest a “dry-brush” technique, leaving tiny voids of the underlying color visible within the leaf shapes.
-
Pigment Dispersion (Clouding): The background features “Atmospheric Tonal Clouding.” Taupe and light grey pigments are dispersed in broad, sweeping washes that include horizontal “dragging” textures, making the field feel like weathered stone or aged parchment.
-
Edge Dispersion (Fibrillated-to-Sharp): The boundaries of the dark indigo leaves feature “Crisp Silhouetted Dispersion” to emphasize their weight, while the lighter sienna and ochre forms exhibit “Fibrillated Edge Dispersion,” where the pigment bleeds softly into the atmospheric background grain.















Reviews
There are no reviews yet.