Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mottled): The primary charcoal leaf forms exhibit “Internal Grain Mottling”. The color is dispersed in dense, uneven clusters that suggest a “dry-ink” or linocut technique, giving the organic shapes a unique, stony grit that mimic weathered concrete or industrial textile dyes.
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Pigment Dispersion (Vaporous): The background sweeps feature “Vaporous Tonal Clouding”. These taupe forms are dispersed so thinly that they reveal the underlying paper texture and white negative space, providing a sense of immense soft-focus depth behind the rigid foreground motifs.
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Edge Dispersion (Sharp-to-Frayed): The boundaries of the main forms feature “Frayed Linear Dispersion”. Every motif maintains a sharp, distinct silhouette to define its botanical nature, but the margins exhibit a jagged, “stamped” quality where the pigment meets the background in a high-contrast, mechanical margin.















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