Description
-
Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): The primary upper background exhibits “Mechanical Surface Dispersion”. The pigment is dispersed in fine, internal “pitted” and “scraped” textures that mimic weathered plaster or aged canvas, providing a tactile, “hand-rubbed” surface quality.
-
Pigment Dispersion (Graduated): The design features “Structural Bedrock Graduation”. Within the base zone, the pigments (blue, orange, and gold) are dispersed in sharp, intersecting “cracks” and porous, splattered layers that transition rapidly into the grey field, suggesting internal luminosity and 3D relief.
-
Edge Dispersion (Fractured-to-Crisp): The boundaries of the main forms feature a “Dual-Action Transition”. While the foreground camellia petals maintain high-fidelity, crisp margins, the background “ghosted” branch clusters and the transition between the oxidizing bedrock and the stone field are dispersed with highly porous, feathered edges.











Reviews
There are no reviews yet.