Kazenouta—“Song of the Wind”—captures the fleeting, whispered conversations between nature and memory. This abstract composition flows like a breeze across a dreamscape, with layered greens, turquoise blues, and sudden notes of rose and crimson that rise like petals stirred by invisible currents. The brushwork is fluid yet grounded, suggesting movement through a field or forest, where color and emotion drift and settle like wind through leaves.
Rooted in the Japanese sensibility of yūgen, the painting invites quiet reflection, offering the viewer a space to sense the unseen—to feel rather than define. It is not a literal song, but a visual one: soft, shifting, and resonant with the poetry of impermanence.
20×20×1.5” acrylic on canvas
Kazenouta—“Song of the Wind”—captures the fleeting, whispered conversations between nature and memory. This abstract composition flows like a breeze across a dreamscape, with layered greens, turquoise blues, and sudden notes of rose and crimson that rise like petals stirred by invisible currents. The brushwork is fluid yet grounded, suggesting movement through a field or forest, where color and emotion drift and settle like wind through leaves.
Rooted in the Japanese sensibility of yūgen, the painting invites quiet reflection, offering the viewer a space to sense the unseen—to feel rather than define. It is not a literal song, but a visual one: soft, shifting, and resonant with the poetry of impermanence.
20×20×1.5” acrylic on canvas